No crowds, no bugs, a roaring fire under the stars: What’s not to like about winter camping?
Published Sunday, Feb. 21, 2021, 11:50 am
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Front Page » Local/State » No crowds, no bugs, a roaring fire under the stars: What’s not to like about winter camping?
Ad Crable
Backpackers head into the Pennsylvania woods. (Bay Journal photo by Ad Crable)
For 21 years, I have led an overnight backpacking excursion to a different wild spot in Pennsylvania on a cold, preferably snowy, winter weekend.
Worst-case scenario for river & bay: Climate change, flooding, dead zones, crab depletion
A worst-case-scenario Chesapeake, with full-blown climate change, could wipe out the millions of dollars and years of effort to improve the ecosystem.
Julia Rentsch, Salisbury Daily Times
Published
3:59 pm UTC Feb. 3, 2021
A worst-case-scenario Chesapeake, with full-blown climate change, could wipe out the millions of dollars and years of effort to improve the ecosystem.
Julia Rentsch, Salisbury Daily Times
Published
3:59 pm UTC Feb. 3, 2021
This USA Today Network special report explores solutions to deep threats that flow through New York, Pennsylvania and Maryland as the Susquehanna River feeds the Chesapeake Bay with life and death.
Advocates Look to Biden to Advance Bay Cleanup lancasterfarming.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lancasterfarming.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Advocates look to Biden to help advance Chesapeake Bay cleanup effort
Published Sunday, Jan. 3, 2021, 9:32 am
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Bay Journal News Service
Bald eagles find a perch in a Chesapeake Bay marsh. (Bay Journal photo by Dave Harp)
After having made progress on a number of fronts during a Trump administration that was generally hostile to environmental spending and regulations, Chesapeake Bay advocates say they’re hoping for much more once President-elect Joe Biden takes office on Jan. 20.