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all items that are part of the online edition of MBHH

While many people think of Kittery as outlet heaven, Maine’s southernmost town has a more charming historic side, with lovely old homes and a bustling downtown, centered around Wallingford Square.
While Nate Levesque has a day-job at the law firm of Eaton Peabody, his true love is photography. Levesque, who graduated from Hampden Academy and the University of Maine, acquired a professional-grade digital camera soon after college and began teaching himself how to use it. A hiker and lover of the outdoors, he sought to capture the scenes that meant so much to him. A few years ago he became interested in shooting the night sky, particularly at Acadia National Park.
Jim Dugan is a photographer in Rockland who explores the Maine Coast while keeping abreast of the latest in digital technology. His “Maine Kaleidoscopes” series takes recognizable Maine scenes, then through computer “copy-and-paste” creates something new and exciting.
Small Adventures: Campobello Island Writer Lee Wilbur takes us across the border.
Want to go golfing? Here’s a sampling of coastal Maine golf courses.
Two Maine gardeners, Vickie Cunningham in South Bristol, and Douglas Cole in Rockport, have worked magic with rocks and stones and a ledge or two.
The Island Country Golf Club on Deer Isle is one of those rare institutions that bring together people of all sorts. Affordable and accessible, it’s the kind of place where golfers of all ages and abilities can enjoy the ancient game. A recent expansion and renovation has made the course even more of a joy to play.
A group of friends in Spruce Head combines forces once a summer to hold a week-long exhibition of their paintings and other artful creations. Peter H. Spectre hosts the group in his workshop.
Thai street food brought to Portland.
The wind and waves move the boats around the Atlantic Circle.
The journey (to Europe?) begins. Students will track unmanned GPS-equipped boats, powered only by the ocean winds and currents, across the Atlantic ocean.
Maine Boats Homes and Harbors Magazine, Table of Contents, Issue 112, Winter 2011
What will it be like at the Maine Boats, Homes & Harbors Show in Rockland this summer? <a href="/online/home-features/you-and-the-home-gallery">Click here to get a feel for the variety and excitement. >></a>
<strong> By Melissa Waterman</strong> - Could the tiny, gluttonous, carbon-dioxide-eating diatom really save the planet?
<strong>By Eva Murray</strong> - Freight is tackled by all civilians, swarming sometimes like ants, and not above loading one man's provisions into another man's rig.
Only a gardener would shout "Yippee!"over a bag of dirt.
Exhibits at the Portland Museum of Art and the Peabody Essex Museum present Antarctica and the Arctic as seen through the eyes of explorers and artists.
Annual fall regatta draws a crowd.
<em>Trumpa</em>, a bass boat designed with the grandkids in mind.
See every exhibitor from the Maine Boats, Homes & Harbors Show, grouped by category. Browse all year, join us next summer (Rockland, second weekend in August).
The 6th annual Maine Boats, Homes & Harbors Show brought some 15,000 people to Rockland, Maine from all over the Maine and beyond. Here's a look at what they saw.
The Show That Never Closes: Power Boats