Saturday, January 28, 2012

RED SOX TICKETS GO ON SALE TODAY AT 10 A.M. ET

106911_Enjoy Free Shipping on All Valentine's Day Gifts - 468x60

redsox.comJanuary 28, 2012
redsox.com
RED SOX TICKETS GO ON SALE TODAY AT 10 A.M. ET
This is your chance to make sure you're in for the historic 2012 season at Fenway Park!

The majority of Red Sox tickets for the 2012 season will go on sale beginning at 10 a.m. ET today, Saturday, January 28. Log on to redsox.com/tickets or call our automated phone line at 888-REDSOX6 to purchase.

Tickets for 71 Red Sox games will be on sale -- and a limited number of 2012 Sox Pax still remain. Tickets for Opening Day and all games with the New York Yankees, as well as seating on the Green Monster and Right Field Bud Deck will again be sold via random drawings. Registration for the drawings will begin on Wednesday, February 1.
2012 ScheduleSingle Game Tickets
redsox.com site navigation below
STATS | SCHEDULE | NEWS | ROSTER | BALLPARK | FAN FORUM | COMMUNITY | FANTASY | MOBILE | SHOP | TICKETS | MULTIMEDIA
Travel with Red Sox Destinations to see the Red Sox at Spring Training.
© 2012 MLB Advanced Media, L.P. All Major League Baseball trademarks, service marks and copyrights used herein are the property of the applicable MLB entity. All rights reserved. Any other marks used herein are trademarks of their respective owners.

Please review our privacy policy »


Postal Address: redsox.com, c/o MLB Advanced Media, L.P., 75 Ninth Avenue, 5th Floor, New York, NY 10011.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Snowmobile Trail Report 01/27/2012


January 27, 2012 Update  

Camping World
Reciprocity Weekend Friday Saturday and Sunday with New Hampshire Maine and Vermont. Register your sled and ride in all 3 states. 
This current storm has dropped 1-5" depending on where you are. Northern areas are reporting fresh snow and grooming is ongoing and report that riding from Vermont to Maine is happening. Get out there and enjoy this Tri State reciprocity weekend.
Use caution in other areas of the state as there is water and ice. Stay off Lakes and Ponds.
Pittsburg- Trails are 100% open 1" new snow on a snow covered icy base. Grooming is ongoing, and conditions range from moderate to great. Watch for water bars, and rocks South of town and there could still be some problem areas and some areas are still closed and are posted as such. Please pay attention to all signage!  There are still logging operations going on. Perry Stream Rd is closed to snowmobile traffic and stay on the side of Magalloway Rd.; some shared roads and are posted 10 mph. Enforcement is Patrolling,  Lakes are still considered to be unsafe! For more details go to www.pittsburgridgerunners.org 
Camping World
Colebrook- Extremely Icy with a thin layer of snow cover to no base in the lower elevations Higher elevations have poor to fair riding conditions, watch for ice on bridges, deep water bars, rocks, etc Trail 3a remains closed Gates to town on 18 are open at this time, could close as current weather conditions continue Please ride with utmost caution.

Stratford- 100% open 1-4" base. Trails are groomed and riding is moderate. Stratford Bog area riding is okay. Potato Hill trail is closed due to logging. Use caution logging at jct of Corr 3 and 7. Watch for water bars.

Groveton/Nash Stream- 80% Open 2-3" base. Trails are groomed and riding is moderate. 5 South Temporarily Closed. 


Diamond Pond/Coleman State Park- 100% open 4" base. Trails are groomed and conditions are good to great. Several logging operations going on. Lake ice is marginal. Due to Furnace issues the bath house at Coleman is temporarily closed. Warming hut open Saturday and Sunday. Gas pumps open 24/7. For more details go to www.swiftdiamondriders.com

Errol- 100% open 1-2" base. Trails are groomed and riding is moderate to good. Use Caution watch for ice.

Cambridge- 100% open.  1-2" base trails are groomed and riding is moderate. Watch for ice.

Milan- 100% open. 1- 2" base. Trails are groomed and riding is moderate. Icy Conditions

Berlin- 100% open 0-4" base.  Some trails are not groomed and riding is marginal. Caution watch for ice. For more details, go to
 www.whitemtridgerunners.com

Berlin/Success- 100% open 1-2" base. Trails are groomed and riding is marginal to moderate. Watch for ice.

Gorham area- 60% open 1-2" base. Trails are groomed and riding is marginal.  Icy spots

Franconia Notch- 1-3" base. Trails are groomed and riding is marginal to moderate. Corr 11 North of Notch is not groomed and riding is marginal.

Campton/Thornton- 100% open. 2-3" base. Trails are groomed and riding is marginal to moderate. Corr 11 Rail line not groomed use caution.

Bear Notch- 100 % open 3-5" new snow on a 4-8” base. Trails are groomed. Riding is good to great. Watch for open water bars. Use caution and watch for mushers and skiers.

Conway/ Chatham- 1-2" new snow. Trails are not groomed and riding is marginal. Open water bars and icy base. RR Tracks south exposed. Use Caution.

Ossipee- 3" new snow on a 1-2" base. Trails are not groomed and riding is marginal. RR Tracks are not covered.

Wakefield- 3-4" new snow Trails are not groomed and riding is poor. Use caution RR Tracks not covered.

Pisgah State Park-  Riding Not available

Pillsbury State Park- Riding Not available

Sullivan- Riding Not available

Andover- Riding Not available

Rail Lines:

  • Northern: Thin to no base. Caution ice and water.
  • Ashuelot: No riding at this time
  • Fort Hill:  No riding at this time
  • Shugah River: No riding at this time
  • Concord to Lincoln:  No riding at this time

Additional Resources and Information

Please be safe and ride with caution.
Respect our landowners.
Watch speeds and stay to the right.

For more information contact brenda.drouin@dred.state.nh.us. 
Explore | Experience | What's Happening | Get Involved | Who We Are | Partner & Community Relations
News | Calendar | Contact Us | Reservations | E-updates
© 2010 NH Department of Resources and Economic Development
172 Pembroke Road P.O. Box 1856 Concord, NH 03302-1856 | T:
 (603) 271-3556 F: (603) 271-3553 

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Scenic Views and Wildlife Are Threatened at Southwestern Parks



USA TODAY

NPCA header

Bighorn sheep
Take Action

Dear Reader,


Although improvements have been made, a revised federal solar energy plan for the American Southwest could allow industrial-scale projects along the boundaries of our national parks.


This action could cut off wildlife corridors, harm scenic vistas, and destroy important habitat for wildlife like bighorn sheep, desert tortoises, and golden eagles.


We can't let this happen.


Tens of thousands of advocates urged the Department of Interior to limit solar development to low impact solar energy zones and also spoke out against developing these zones next to national parks. Your voices were heard, and many zones near national parks were eliminated or reconfigured to protect these special places!


Despite that important victory, the latest proposal would unfortunately allow solar projects to be sited adjacent to our southwestern parks outside of the low impact solar energy zones we all worked so hard to create.


Take  Action: Act today and tell the Departments of Energy and the Interior that you support solar energy development, but not at the expense of national park resources, including sensitive wildlife that roam across the landscape to find water, food, and mates.


Thank you for speaking up for our desert national parks and the wildlife that inhabits them. Future generations will appreciate your action today!


Sincerely,

David


David Lamfrom
Sr. Program Manager, California Desert


This message was sent by the National Parks Conservation Association.


E-mail us at TakeAction@npca.org, write to us at 777 6th Street, NW, Suite 700, Washington, DC 20001, or call us at 800.NAT.PARK (800.628.7275).


Can't see this message? View it on the NPCA Website.
NPCA | 777 6th Street, NW | Suite 700 | Washington, DC 20001 | 800.NAT.PARK | npca@npca.org

Senate Blocks Eminent Domain For Northern Pass - Politics News Story - WMUR New Hampshire

Senate Blocks Eminent Domain For Northern Pass - Politics News Story - WMUR New Hampshire

New Protections For Property Owners Added To Bill

327767_2012 - MANTIS 4-CYCLE DELUXE TILLER PAGE - 160 X 600POSTED: 2:42 pm EST January 25, 2012
UPDATED: 6:01 pm EST January 25, 2012

The state Senate on Wednesday passed a bill that would prevent the controversial Northern Pass power transmission project from taking property by eminent domain.
The near-unanimous measure combines language in the state constitution and existing law to guarantee private property rights against private acquisition.
"While public purposes sometimes require the taking of private property by eminent domain as a last resort, it is completely inappropriate that New Hampshire citizens should live in fear of taking by private projects for private gain," said Sen. Jeanie Forrester, R-District 2.
The Northern Pass project would bring electrical power to New England by cutting a transmission line through New Hampshire. Opponents of the $1 billion project who do not want to sell their land have been concerned the company could ultimately take the property through eminent domain.
"This is our land," said Karen Placey, who owns land in West Stewartstown. "This is something that means something to us, and that's it. We don't want to sell. We don't want it taken, so I feel good about this today."

Read more: Click Here

The Day - Skiing to a Remote Mountain Hut in Sleet, Wind and Snow – What Fun! | News from southeastern Connecticut

Vitamin World

Skiing to a Remote Mountain Hut in Sleet, Wind and Snow – What Fun!

Publication: theday.com
Published 01/21/2012 12:00 AM
Updated 01/20/2012 07:53 PM




While hiking at night up the Tuckerman Ravine Trail toward the Hermit Lake Shelters below New Hampshire’s Mount Washington a number of years ago, I puzzled at a canned ham stuck in a snow bank.
A few yards farther up I encountered other food items and assorted gear similarly scattered along the path. I could hear shouting and cursing ahead.
Propelled as much by curiosity as a desire to reach shelter and burrow in my sleeping bag before tackling the summit the next day, I pushed forward and soon solved the mystery.
Half a dozen college-age guys were dragging an enormous toboggan laden with hundreds of pounds of supplies up the steep slope, and little by little they were jettisoning cargo to lighten the load. Among the last provisions they would sacrifice, I suspected, was a case of beer lashed down with rope.
The exhausted crew staggered noisily to the shelter hour later, and one peek through the zippered opening in my bag proved my prediction about the beer had been accurate.
I thought about their Sisyphusian struggle the other day as I slogged the last few yards to Zealand Falls Hut, perched more than half a mile high at the eastern edge of the Pemigewasset Wilderness in New Hampshire’s White Mountains.
For three miles I had cross-country skied while towing a plastic sled loaded with about 60 pounds of gear along a relatively flat, unplowed forest road. Then the road ended and a winding, 2.8-mile path to the hut began. Because the narrow trail was deeply rutted and crossed several streams I found it easier to hike, so I took off my skis, strapped them to the sled and plodded rather than schussed while still towing the sled.
This worked relatively efficiently until the last 500 feet, when the trail rose steeply over ice-covered rocks. A light rain that had been falling for the past hour switched to wind-driven sleet, and I didn’t want to undo the waterproof tarp covering my pack and dig around for hiking boots and grippers, so I slipped and slid while dragging the cursed sled. I also may have let loose with a few profanities.
At this point a crew of skiers also heading to the shelter that had started out behind me caught up and I thought to myself, this is a nice way to make an impression. My buddy Phil Plouffe, who had arrived ahead of me, came back to help me pull the sled the last 50 yards, and a few minutes later we all stamped up the steps to the wooden shelter, tired but happy to be out of the wretched elements.
“We made it!” cried Rick Ely of Stonington, a longtime friend who organized the expedition.
In addition to Phil, Rick and me there were four others: Rick’s wife, Laura; and Jeff Parker, Andrew Watson and Chris Smarz, who all work in the bike store Rick and a partner own, Mystic Cycle Centre. The purpose of this outing, as if we needed one, was to celebrate Andrew’s birthday.
Zealand Falls Hut, owned and operated by the Appalachian Mountain Club, is one of several White Mountain shelters open to hikers all year. A few years earlier I had spent a week as a winter caretaker a few miles north at the Gray Knob Shelter owned and operated by the Randolph Mountain Club. Over the years I’ve also bunked at virtually every shelter in the Whites, as well as pitched tents at campsites and hunkered down in just about every lean-to, when my son, Tom and I were tagging all 67 of the 4,000-foot-plus-high mountains in New England.
Zealand is one of the most accessible and one of my favorite winter destinations because the unheated bunkrooms are directly off the main cabin instead of located in separate buildings, making it a relatively easy transition from dinner table to sleeping bag. Also, the outhouse connects to the cabin.
Caretaker Steve Frens lit the wood stove right on schedule at 4 p.m., and soon our quarters were relatively toasty. (for complete story click here)