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Toddy Pond Association Newsletter Spring 2011 Issue 26 Our Mission We believe that we have a responsibility to protect Toddy Pond and its watershed so that we and future generations may enjoy its beauty and the recreational opportunities it provides. Our objective is to protect the air, water, soil, plant and animal life of the watershed and to preserve its economic, ecological and aesthetic value by encouraging responsible land and water use. President's Message Donna Foster Happy Spring! Winter on Toddy Pond delivered many feet of snow. Often in early to mid-January the ice was unsafe due to rain and slush coverings, preventing ice activities. In February, however, at least two fishing derbies were successfully held. Ice went out on about April 13. One of our fall/winter projects was to begin a membership campaign by sending postcards to non-member Toddy Pond property owners to inform them of the Toddy Pond Association and provide some information about our activities. A second postcard was sent to this group in mid-May, inviting them to a BBQ in late June (see the article below). In this informal, meet-and-greet atmosphere, we hope to tell them more about our association and encourage them to join us. Current members are also invited. If you have a neighbor who is not yet a member, please invite them also. This will also be a place for current members to reconnect, make new acquaintances, and get up-to-date information about the many events planned for this summer. I’d like to thank all of our members for their support, and to send a big WELCOME to our new members. We look forward to sharing ideas and working with you to develop our programs and projects. Please remember that TPA's board members are available for your comments, questions, or suggestions. You'll find a listing of board members and project coordinators on the last page of this newsletter. Let them hear from you!. There are exciting activities planned for this summer, and we hope that you will be able to participate with us. TPA Annual Meeting The TPA annual meeting will be held at the Blue Hill Consolidated School on July 19. A potluck supper at 6:00 pm will be followed by a business meeting at 7:00 and a presentation on an environmental topic yet to be determined (watch toddypond.org for an announcement). As always, friends and neighbors are welcome.. June 22 — Invasive Plant Patrol Workshop At MERI in Blue Hill, 1:00 pm. See the article on page 3. June 26 — Hail to Summer BBQ Balsam Cove Campground pavilion, 4:00–7:00 pm. See below. July 16 — Toddy Pond Loon Count 7:30–8:00 am. See the article on page 3. July 19 — TPA Annual Potluck and Business Meeting Blue Hill Consolidated School, 6:00 pm. August 21 — Invasive Plant Patrol Workshop Toddy Pond public boat landing, 8:00 am. See the article on page 3.. TPA Hail to Summer BBQ On June 26 the Toddy Pond Association will celebrate the season at the first annual Hail to Summer Barbecue. TPA members and their families are invited, and are urged to extend the invitation to neighbors who are not yet members. (Many of them will already have received an invitation as part of our outreach effort, but ask them anyway!) The operators of the Balsam Cove Campground on First Toddy, Joe and Michelle Letts, have generously offered their pavilion for this event. To get there, take the Back Ridge Road (south from where it meets Route 1 just west of the dam, or north from Route 15 near the intersection with 199) to Balsam Cove Road. Festivities will be ongoing from 4:00–7:00 pm, and there are no formalities whatsoever, so folks may drop in when it suits them. TPA will provide barbecued chicken, sides, and soft drinks. If you would like to bring something to share feel free to do so, but it's not required. We'll have plenty. To help us plan, please let us know if you will be coming and how many people you'll be bringing. You can send an email to contact@toddypond.org, or phone Keith or Donna at 667-1319. The Toddy Pond Association Newsletter is printed on recycled paper using non-toxic, vegetable inks. A Million-Dollar Challenge Marking Toddy's Hazards Phil Tardif “Seven groups get $500,000 to test suction harvesters, light-blocking mats, and other milfoil-fighting methods.” According to a Sept. 1, 2010 article in the Portland Press Herald, Sebago Lake is desperately battling milfoil with a harvester and other devices. When milfoil was discovered in Little Sebago lake, its association spent $100,000 to start its milfoil control program. Annually, Little Sebago Lake Association has budgeted $30,000–$40,000 to keep their cove clear of milfoil. Other lake associations are spending thousands of dollars in an often futile attempt to control and eradicate invasive aquatic plants. Property values in infected ponds have decreased. Swimming, fishing, and boating have all been affected by the thick matting of plants near the shoreline. Eradication is next to impossible. Invasive aquatic plants are a serious and expensive problem. Thirty-three ponds and lakes in Maine are currently waging this expensive war. Messalonskee Lake and Stream, Damariscotta Lake, Salmon Pond in the Belgrade area, Sebago Lake, and Cobbossee Stream all have invasive plants. Toddy Pond and other lakes are extremely vulnerable; a plant fragment on fishing tackle, a motor, or boat trailer can spell disaster to our pond. Once introduced, these plants multiply quickly in shallow, warm waters. Because our pond has such shallow waters, it offers a perfect breeding ground for hydrilla, variable leaf milfoil, and other plants. Toddy Pond is an inviting host to these insidious plants. In recent years TPA volunteer boat inspectors have given many hours to the crucial effort to prevent an invasion, but the supply of volunteers has fallen short of the need. Recognizing the importance of this effort, the Toddy Pond Association directors has voted to hire a boat inspector to work Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays during the months of July and August. We will also attempt to schedule volunteers to cover Wednesdays and Thursdays, giving a total of five days of inspections at the Route 1 boat landing. This is a costly undertaking for our small organization, requiring the dedication of nearly all our dues income for the current year. To meet this challenge we will be asking for donations and a dues increase for next year. Our campaign to increase our membership — only about one quarter of lakeshore property owners are members — is also important. These are big challenges, but failure to meet them now could result in a staggering challenge in the future. To volunteer for weekday inspections in July and August, contact me (Phil Tardiff), at 469-0784 Keith R. Heavrin, Jr On March 3rd we received a phone call from Mr Timothy Thurston, who works in the Maine Department of Conservation, Bureau of Parks and Land, Boating Facilities Divison, in Augusta. Among the projects his office conducts is navigation hazard surveys and marking in Maine waters. Mr Thurston explained that his department has funds available, probably this year only, to do comprehensive surveys of as many Maine lakes as they can schedule, then to provide and install navigation markers for those hazards they identify within navigable waters. Navigable waters are those waters 200 feet or more from shore. The official markers are well-anchored buoys, nine inches in diameter, standing thirty-six inches above the water, They are of several different designations: for hazards, navigation channels, and speed control. The markers would be maintained annually by the Department after installation. There will be no costs for the survey, the buoys, or the maintenance afterwards. We will incur no legal liability for any part of this project now or into the future. Feedback needed Mr Thurston said his department seeks out the representatives of local lake associations as a channel for feedback: "Before we move ahead with marking a water body, we like to know the interests and concerns of the residents of the lake." They have currently surveyed and maintain navigation markers in more than thirty Maine lakes. The Toddy Pond Association board of directors considered this offer and responded positively. The next step is to gather feedback from our pond's residents and to relay our feedback to the Boating Facilities Division as they proceed with the survey. After the survey is completed by two DOC boats and their crews, we will receive a report detailing their survey findings and a representative from the Boating Facilities Division will meet with us to discuss recommendations. Board discussion so far has included whether such hazard markings would encourage speeding boats. The consensus on this issue was that those boaters who speed imprudently will do so regardless. We hope to make our waters safer for the families and majority of recreational boaters. Also discussed were incidents where current markers have been BOAT INSPECTOR WANTED The Toddy Pond Association seeks to hire a person to inspect boats for invasive plants at the public launch in Orland on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays in July and August. Hours will be 8:00 am to 3:00 pm and pay will be $10/hour. No experience is necessary; training will be provided. The position requires someone with good communication skills who can relate comfortably with boaters. Applicants should contact Jeff Smith at 469-3557. 2 vandalized or removed from the places they mark. Another concern expressed is that because the markers must remain in place year round they might pose a hazard to snowmobilers in winter. That danger has been minimized on other lakes that have hazard markings by communicating with local snowmobile clubs, ice fishermen, and residents, as well as placing signs at lake access points, advising the public of the presence of the buoys. Our hope is that by all of us working together, our efforts can take advantage of beneficial opportunities such as this when they come along. Right now we need to hear your comments and concerns. Please contact me or one of the representatives for your pond. You can contact me at keith. heavrin@gmail.com or 207-667-1319. Floating Loon Nests on Toddy Pond, networking with experienced loon observers on the pond to determine where to place these first nest opportunities. One platform is located in the beaver flowage in the southwest quadrant of Second Toddy; the other is in the cove in the northeast corner of Second Toddy. Success with these floating nest sites will lead to a possible addition of more next year. Invasive Plant Patrol Bob LeVine This summer, Toddy Pond’s Invasive Plant Patrol (IPP) has a greater chance than ever to become effective in protecting our shoreline through early detection. The new conditions include: Training workshops for volunteers old and new, will be held by the State’s Voluntary Lake Monitoring Program, in Blue Hill (at the Marine Environmental Research Institute, MERI, on the main street of Blue Hill, at 1 p.m.) on June 22, and on Toddy Pond itself (at the public boat access in Orland, at 8:00 a.m.) on August 21. Attendance at one of these workshops offers the chance to be certified as a trained IPP Volunteer. (Branch Lake has 30 certified volunteers; we don’t have any — yet.) Keith R. Heavrin, Jr In the middle of the 2009 loon nesting season on Toddy Pond, these magnificent birds experienced a disaster. A very rainy few days toward the last week of the egg incubation period caused the waters of Toddy Pond to rise about eighteen inches. That rise flooded nests and killed the eggs of a lot of our loons. Unfortunately, loons often choose nest sites that are vulnerable to a rise in water level. Those nests in the floating islands, which rise and fall with the water level, were unaffected. The Toddy Pond Association decided to explore the possibility of constructing and placing floating loon nest platforms. Research indicates that the success rate of these low visual impact, natural looking nest sites is very high. The floating platforms are of log or cedar slab construction, six feet square and covered with mosses and vegetation to appear natural. Under the wire netting that supports the covering of mosses and grasses are slabs of flotation foam, sliced to be low-profile. Some branches are placed around the outside perimeter to provide cover. This has proven an effective deterrent to eagle predation. Signage on the platforms warns curious humans to keep their distance. We’ll be able to build on last year’s strong performance, which included ten IPP volunteers inspecting the shoreline and submitting forms forwarded to the Maine Center for Invasive Aquatic Plants, Rob Giffin’s building a glass-bottomed boat for use in these inspections, and the creation of a visual online inventory of common weeds on our shoreline (to help us identify an invader when we see one). The TPA annual meeting will be held earlier this year, so we’ll be able to recruit new members for IPP at the meeting, and with an IPP Field Workshop on Toddy Pond on August 21st, they’ll be able to get trained in time to participate in the annual survey soon afterwards. Increasing the number of our trained volunteers, especially for First Toddy, is a major objective. Anyone who is interested in plant patrolling in 2011 — it’s fun and instructive as well as protecting Toddy Pond — should get in touch with me (Bob LeVine) at levine68@ gmail.com or (after June 10th) at (207) 667-1293. There will be a kick-off meeting at my house late in June or early July. The Common Loon Ginger Doyle Why do we care so much about common loons? True to their name, they are fairly common in Maine, nesting on many of our lakes in the summer, and spending the winter in the frigid waters off-shore. They are so much a part of our Maine outdoor heritage that we may forget how unique and special they are. After all, Maine is the only state in the northeast with such a robust and apparently healthy loon population. Just before the 2011 loon nesting season, Keith Heavrin and Rob Giffin built and placed two new floating loon nests 3 Watershed Survey But this is exactly why we do care about loons, and why loons have made such a compelling species of wildlife to study over the last 27 years of Maine Audubon’s Annual Loon Count. A healthy loon population is indicative of clean water, vigorous fish populations, high-quality wetlands, and a healthy lake ecosystem. Reasonable regulations that have protected shoreland zones, reduced road runoff, and maintained high water quality have paid off in making our lakes healthy places for loons, as well as for people. The 2010 Loon Count took place on a near-perfect Saturday morning last July. On the morning of the July 17, 2010 count, Toddy Pond Volunteer Loon Counters counted 22 adults, 1 chick and 4 nests. However, a comment was added to the report submitted to Maine Audubon stating four chicks were seen on a regular basis after the July 17th count throughout the month of August. We are in the process of having two loon nesting structures built and placed on the pond for the 2011 summer season in the hopes they will keep our nesting pairs interested in setting up home on Toddy. The loon population in Maine has been growing steadily for the last couple of years, and the 2010 count showed that trend continuing, with an estimate of 3,220 adults in the southern half of the state (roughly south of the line from Rangeley to Calais). This is the highest number of adult loons ever estimated in the 27-year history of the count, and that’s great news, especially in light of the dip in loon numbers evident in the mid- to late-nineties. It appears our loon population has officially “recovered” and is doing better than ever. The estimate for the chick population wasn’t quite as high. The 2010 estimate was 283 chicks, which is just about average (the low chick count was 141 in 2006, and the high was 440 in 2007). (Information excerpted from the Winter 2010-2011 issue of Habitat, published by Maine Audubon. Information on the 2010 summary for the whole state is available at http://www.maineaudubon.org/ conserve/loon/index.shtml.) Last year our volunteers were Jane and Jerry Armstrong, Ginger and Paul Doyle, Linda Ellison (with friends and family), Donna Foster and Keith Heavrin Jr, Dwight Gates, Bob Jones, Arn Krugman, Bob and Sarah LeVine, Betty Ring, Fred Shair, and Terry Swazey (with friends and family). Chris Dadian The TPA is supporting an application from the Hancock County Soil & Water Conservation District to the Maine Department of Environmental Protection for a grant to conduct a survey of the Toddy Pond Watershed. The purpose of the survey is to identify sources of soil erosion that may be polluting the ponds. A completed watershed survey provides the basis for remediation projects. If the grant is approved, volunteers would be trained next spring and would conduct the survey in May and June. We are also looking into the Watershed Stewards Program, an educational resource offered by the University of Maine Cooperative Extension that covers many of the factors affecting the health of our lake, including invasive aquatic plant and animal species, camp roads, shoreland zoning, lakefront buffers, etc. We hope to have representatives from the Hancock County Soil & Water Conservation District and the Extension at the annual meeting to describe these programs and answer questions. Look for an update and in-depth information in the fall issue of the Toddy Pond Newsletter. TPA Membership Nancy Lord In 2010 we increased our membership to 104 members, nine of them new families. We are hoping to expand our membership further in 2011. Let’s make this a “banner year.” During the winter, a committee worked on an outreach campaign to the many Toddy Pond residents who are not members. The committee consisted of myself, Chris Dadian, Donna Foster, Rob and Maureen Giffin, Keith Heavrin, Jeff Smith, and Phil Tardif. We compiled a mailing list from tax rolls we obtained from the four towns, including approximately 280 names. In February we sent a postcard to this list describing some of the association’s activities and inviting those interested to contact us. We received several reponses to that mailing. In May we sent a second postcard, inviting all to a barbecue to be held on June 26, at the Balsam Cove Campround (see the announcement above for details). We hope that current members will also attend and help us meet and greet our neighbors and, hopefully, persuade many of them to join our organization. For this year Ruthanne Brown, Chris Dadian and Nina Davis, and Ed and Ramune Dalide have signed on. The 2011 Loon Count will take place on July 16th, from 7:30 to 8:00 am. We are looking for additional volunteers to help with the count. Our volunteer have large areas to count in the half hour allowed and we would like to divide up the areas with additional helpers. If you would like to help us out, please contact me (Ginger Doyle) at 207-479-2195. No previous experience is required and the count will take less than an hour of your time. Where Does the Money Go? Linda Jellison Have you ever wondered why the TPA collects annual membership dues and how that money is being managed and spent? Membership money is used in several ways. One of our major expenses is our biannual newsletter, including printing and postage. We feel these newsletters are a valuable way to get information out to camp own- 4 The Value of Membership or, Why Be a Member? ers and friends of Toddy Pond to keep them informed and up-to-date on such things as invasive plants, water levels, water quality, pesticides, and upcoming events and meeting. We also include contact information of all the officers, board of directors, and project coordinators in order that members have someone they can reach with concerns, questions, and/or information. The Toddy Pond Association itself pays membership dues, to the Coalition of Lakes Association. COLA keeps member lake associations informed as to the latest information in water quality testing and up-to-date information on invasive plants, etc. Each year we try to send several of our board members to their informative annual meeting. Expenses related to plant identification information, such as brochures, training, etc. has been fairly minor, but we are aware that if we ever discover invasive plants in our lovely pond we very quickly will incur major expenses so we really need to educate boat owners and try to do boat inspections as much as possible. Up until this season we had been trying to recruit enough volunteers to do boat inspections. However, starting this season, the TPA has found it necessary to hire a boat inspector for the summer weekends at the boat landing on First Toddy to check boats and motors for any plant residue and help educate boat owners about the importance of cleaning their boats and motors when taking them from one lake to another so as not to transfer plant life from one lake to another. This will cost us an additional $1,900 this year, an amount that by itself represents more than two-thirds of our total income for 2010.. Sometimes we also incur some additional expenses in connection with our annual meeting. To help with fund raising we are selling sweatshirts, t-shirts, and caps with our loon logo. You can see samples of these for sale at our annual meeting. This year the TPA initiated a membership campaign to try and increase membership. We have had two postcard mailings to camp owners who are currently not TPA members and we are planning a BBQ in June for new members to get acquainted with our organization. We expect that these mailings and BBQ will prove be a very worthwhile investment. Much of what we accomplish as a group involves volunteer labor and donated materials (loon platforms, glassbottomed canoe, loon survey, boat inspections, plant patrol, newsletter editing, water testing, etc.). Because of this, until now revenues — almost all from dues — have been adequate, and have even allowed us to build a small reserve to use for projects like the membership initiative. But adding the cost of paying a boat inspector, which will be an annually recurring item, our expenses will be more than our revenues in this and coming years. The board will most likely ask for a dues increase at the annual meeting in July. Hopefully this information will give you a better idea of how your Toddy Pond Association membership dues are used to help keep our lake clean and healthy for generations to come. Donna Foster As we engage in an outreach project to connect with Toddy Pond property owners the question, "Why should I be a member?" is likely one of the first questions a person may ask oneself. Membership develops a shared appreciation of a common set of values along with a passionate desire to work together to keep Toddy Pond a place of beauty and fond memories into the future. As groups work together on common goals and projects, friendships are created. This can become important for generations to come. Good stewards are caretakers, caring for the pond, it’s wildlife, it’s aquatic life, so that it may be enjoyed for a long long time. These are the activities that make membership meaningful in the Toddy Pond Association. Make the most of your membership. Celebrate the pond and all it has to offer. Please consider joining us! Do it now! Operators are standing by. Toddy Pond Fashion Nancy Lord We still have many t-shirts in different sizes and many colors and a few sweatshirts. This year we are also offering hats with our loon logo. The loon is embroidered and very attractive. These items will be available at the barbecue and at the annual meeting. To can also purchase or order by calling me (Nancy Lord) at 207-469-2188. TPA Website News Donna Foster There's a new addition to toddypond.org! We now have a Classified tab on the home page where members can list cottage/home offerings for rent, and where visitors can locate local lodging opportunities. Check it out if you have a listing to post. At present listing is a members-only service. Our Spring 2011 newsletter will be posted on the website in early June. It is downloadable and printable to give to friends and neighbors. 5 The Evolution of the Toddy Pond Association If You're Lucky Enough to Be on the Lake ... You're Lucky Enough Sarah LeVine The TPA developed out of a meeting of camp owners called in August 1998 by Bob Jones, a longtime summer resident. At that time rumor had it that the Town of Surry was about to establish a second public boat landing on a lot the town owned in West Surry and Bob felt that property owners should be involved in the decision. About a hundred people showed up at the meeting in the Surry School and though it turned out that the rumor was just a rumor, a number of us were so impressed by the response that we decided it would be a good idea to form an organization for the protection of the pond and its watershed. The following summer a smaller group met to establish the Toddy Pond Environmental Association (“environmental” was dropped in 2007) with Bob Jones as president of the board, to which each of the three ponds, First/Lower, Second/Middle and Third/Upper Toddy, nominated two camp owner members. At the outset the board identified several topics on which to focus its energies. These included watching out for loons as they paired, nested, hatched and raised their chicks; monitoring the quality of the water; marking submerged rocks in the narrows with buoys; and putting out an annual newsletter to make people aware of environmental issues relevant to the pond and to provide historical information. (In 2008 these articles were gathered together and published as “A History of Toddy Pond”; the 2010 edition is available for $12 (to order, email sarahlevine5@gmail.com). Many of us now believe that the most important threat to the pond is provided by invasive plant species, including Eurasian milfoil and hydrilla, which are clogging lakes not only in Massachusetts and New Hampshire but also in Southern Maine as close as 50 miles from Toddy. Knowing that one tiny fragment of e.g. milfoil could take root in the muddy bottom and within just a few years pervade the entire pond up to a depth of 25 feet, thereby making boating, swimming, and fishing impossible and severely impacting property values, we have organized a roster of association members to inspect all boats putting into the water at the East Orland boat landing. For several summers past, on Saturdays and Sundays between July 4 and Labor Day (when boat traffic is heaviest) volunteer inspectors, whose objective is to prevent any plant residue from entering the pond, man the boat landing. In addition to “boat inspectors,” we recruit “plant inspectors” from each of the three sections of the pond, whose mandate is to become familiar with all native plant species on their part of the shoreline so that, should an invasive species be discovered, immediate action may be taken to remove it. Each summer the association invites all our members to a potluck supper at a local venue, followed by a meeting at which an invited speaker talks on an environmental topic of interest, and committee heads present reports on activities in the preceding twelve months and plans for the future. Donna Foster What a great place to be. Sitting on the rock near the shore, so many bird songs play through the air, punctuated by the whistle of the osprey searching the water for alewives. An occasional motored watercraft passes by, and the loons call in acknowledgement. Kayaks, canoes, water skiers — all enjoying the pond. The sound of children's voices echo with the squealings of joy. The sound of the loons calling late into the darkness ... AAHHHHH. That's the good stuff. So many activities. So much life in and around the pond. We can enjoy watching the day begin, or end with the sunset, almost any time that we are inclined to do so. People fishing, trolling along, pause to say, "Hi, isn't this a great day?". Well, yes it is. Fortunate we are to be able to be beneficiaries of these extraordinary experiences. Spring at Toddy Pond Laurie Murray Nature has called me outside again, outside of the lake house that sits on the water’s edge at Toddy Pond. It is spring, the beginning of a new season, a time of renewal and restoration, a pushing back of the hardships of winter. The vernal equinox came only a month ago, bringing with it longer days and warmer temperatures. Tonight as I step out onto the deck, the rising trill of the spring peepers in the cove near the lake house provides a chorus that echoes into the night. Arcturus sits in the southeastern sky, its orangish-yellow glow fixed near the celestial equator, reminding those who look up into the dark skies of Maine that April will end in just a few days. Gone is the ice that encapsulated Toddy Pond during the cold winter months, replaced now by cool waters that entice waterfowl to nest near its shores. The wail of a loon on the other side of the cove is returned by its mate, the pair seeking to reunite under the twinkling stars. The first time I saw the lake house was the summer before I had agreed to housesit for the winter and spring months in 2009. Before I made my finally decision to housesit, I had asked the owners if I could spend the day getting to know the place. With a picnic basket in tow, I ventured forth from Lincolnville Beach, where I had been staying for the summer. Traveling up Route 1 through Searsport and Bucksport, I finally neared Toddy Pond. The trees then were still lush with summer foliage. A one-lane dirt road that led to the lane of the lake house was narrow, overhanging with balsam fir and spruce boughs. Several large pinkish-gray granite boulders along Decorum Road made it a tight squeeze for vehicles making their way to the homes and cottages nestled in the maritime spruce-fir forest of Toddy Pond. The lane itself curves and winds around glacier erratic left over from the last ice age and one feels as if entering an enchanted forest. 6 The day I visited Toddy Pond last summer, chickadees and goldfinches sang in the trees above me. After I had deposited my food in the refrigerator, I went to the back yard that slopes to the water’s edge. I followed the balsam needle path that led to the dock. I remember standing on the dock for quite a while, taking in all the sights and sounds around me, as several Canada geese patrolled the waters and a red-winged blackbird sat on a cattail nearby singing in the summer sun. Most of that day, I spent in leisurely reading as I lay in a hammock that had been tied to two balsam firs near the shore. An hour or so before the sun began to set; I decided to go for a swim. As I waded past clumps of soft rush, I noticed that it had just started to flower. The rush and the cattails swayed back and forth as a light wind pushed gently across the crystal-clear lake. Swimming past the pickerelweed, I saw several scarlet blue damselflies flitting about on a fragrant white water lily. The coolness of the water refreshed me. On a downed tree fifty feet away, three painted turtles bathed themselves in the sun. After diving underneath the chilly water, I swam further and further out from the dock. When I surfaced, two common loons appeared. Earlier in the day, I had heard their methodical call, but never thought that I would ever get this close, close enough to see the broken white necklace that graces the neck of these duck-like birds that yodel the length and breadth of Toddy Pond. They stayed near me for almost twenty minutes as we shared the waters of this lake in Down East Maine. Now it is eight months later and I have spent the last four months living at the lake house. I have enjoyed the daily visits of the turkeys, the red fox, and the white-tailed deer. Numerous species of birds have come to my feeding station and have partaken of the morsels that I have set out for them. Several times I even had black-capped chickadees feeding out of my hand. When I leave my season of housesitting at Toddy Pond at the end of May, many memories will go with me, memories of spring peepers singing into the night, memories of swimming with the loons. Laurie Murray is a candidate for the MFA in Creative Nonfiction at Ashland University, Ashland, Ohio. Toddy Pond Calls Keith Heavrin, Jr. This Spring is slow, as mud and snow frames bare ground so nice. Small waters wind rowed springtails flow to soils from melting ice. Tree buds stuck and swell not much, ignoring Chickadee’s call. Increasing sun a joy to tell, for squirrels and wild ones all. Geese have called their ancient song, warm days pursue their flights. Beloved friends, missed on Toddy so long, prepare for summer rites. Willow dog yearns for children’s joy, to swim and fetch thrown toys. She’ll sneak through ferns by any ploy, to play with girls and boys. Return you all, paradise awaits, our Toddy Pond unlike another. Heed the call of islands and straits, where waters meet each other. Three Toes asleep and frogs to peep will awaken soon in turn. Up from the deep, fresh food to reap, and ashore the barbecues burn. Soon best of all, we’ll hear loon’s call, so hauntingly day and night. May summer days crawl, going slowest of all, a brilliance of warm and bright. 7 Toddy Pond Association President Donna Foster ☎ 667-1319 Vice President: Bob Jones ☎ 664-6190 Secretary: Keith R. Heavrin, Jr. ☎ 667-1319 Treasurer Linda Jellison ☎ 469-3775 Board of Directors First Toddy Nancy Lord ☎ 469-2188 Jeff Smith ☎ 469-3557 Phil Tardif ☎ 469-0784 Second Toddy Chris Dadian ☎ 469-0234 Sarah LeVine ☎ 667-1293 Bob LeVine ☎ 667-1293 Third Toddy Ernie Gelinas ☎ 667-3738 Linda Jellison ☎ 469-3775 Dick Salminen ☎ 667-1279 Project Coordinators Boat Inspections ...................... Phil Tardif ☎ 469-0784 Jeff Smith ☎ 469-3557 Boat Landing ........................... Dick Salminen ☎ 667-1279 Email List ................................ Chris Dadian ☎ 469-0234 Fishing ..................................... Bruce Brown ☎ 667-6190 Fish Testing ............................. John Manfred ☎ 667-9545 History ..................................... Sarah LeVine ☎ 667-1293 Loon Count . ............................ Ginger Doyle ☎ 326-8351 Membership and Mailings . ..... Nancy Lord ☎ 469-2188 Newsletter Editor . ................... Chris Dadian ☎ 469-0234 Pesticides ................................. Bob Jones ☎ 664-6190 Bob LeVine ☎ 667-1293 Plant Patrol .............................. Bob LeVine ☎ 667-1293 Water Rights ............................ Bob Jones ☎ 664-6190 Water Testing ........................... Dick Salminen ☎ 667-1279 Website Managers ................... Donna Foster ☎ 667-1319 Ian Foster Toddy Pond Association P.O. Box 645 Blue Hill, ME 04614 OFFICErs