UpdatedFri, Mar 5, 2021 at 11:30 am ET
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Paul McDougall, 53, is making his first run for elected office and taking on two entrenched incumbents to represent the town on the Planning Board. (Paul McDougall)
This is one in an occasional series looking at local candidates running in the Chelmsford town election on April 6. Today we profile Paul McDougall who is running for one of three seats open on the Planning Board, which is a three-year position.
He will face off against Deidre Connolly, and incumbents Glenn Kohl and Tim Shanahan for one of three available seats up for election.
CHELMSFORD, MA Paul McDougall, 53, is making his first run for elected office and taking on two entrenched incumbents to represent the town on the Planning Board. McDougall, who has two daughters, is a graduate of Nashoba Valley technical high school graduate in Westford and owns an HVAC contracting company.
7 Days of Darkness-Dark Beers at Radicle Effect
I talked with Glenn Cole about hops this week and the role in flavor they have. It s interesting how the growing environment has so much to do with flavor. But it s the reason there s such thing as a New England IPA vs a West Coast IPA.
But we should ve planned better because it s Radicle Effect s 7 Days of Darkness celebration. 7 Days. 7 Beers. From what I understand.the darkness comes from the malt. The more the grain is roasted the darker & more complex the pallet becomes.
I think. You should go to Radicle Effect Brewerks to find out for sure.
New strawberry varieties boost growers flexibility farmprogress.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from farmprogress.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
UC Davis releases two new strawberry varieties
Red, ripe strawberries are the hallmark of spring in California. Two new varieties from the Public Strawberry Breeding Program at the University of California, Davis, will provide consumers with big, flavorful strawberries throughout fall and winter, too.
“These cultivars were developed to provide high-quality fruit from late summer through the holidays,” said Professor Steve Knapp, director of the UC Davis Strawberry Breeding Program.
The new varieties UCD Finn and UCD Mojo are “extreme day neutral,” which means they were bred for summer planting, especially in coastal climates from Santa Maria south. They were developed to replace Portola, the only other UC variety that is planted in the summer and harvested in the fall and winter. Portola is popular with farmers for its high yield, but some consumers say the variety lacks flavor.