Spire 2021 Issue

A Letter From the Editor

Rebecca Champagne Ph.D. Candidate, Ecology and Environmental Sciences University of Maine   Welcome! I am so thrilled to present Spire’s fifth issue, the journal’s largest issue yet. It contains a variety of submissions, including art, poetry, photography, research, and personal stories. This collection of diverse content reflects Spire’s vision and mission to unite communities and […]

Read more

Comparing Climate Change Communications Across Maine Wild Blueberry, Apple, and Potato Growing Communities

By Sarah Marcotte   Abstract In the face of changing climate, adaptations to agricultural systems are necessary to ensure the resilience of our food systems. Despite the increasing urgency for these measures, multiple barriers exist which prevent growers from adopting adaptive practices. Political tensions and attitudes of skepticism amongst growers have created challenges in communicating […]

Read more

Honoring Our History: Restoration on the Megunticook River

By Hallie Arno   The deluge of water cascading under stores and over walls in Camden is archetypical coastal Maine—this iconic river is in postcards, pictures, and magazines. The existence of the dam that creates the river as we know it, and the history of the mills it emblemizes, insinuates the history of prosperity in […]

Read more

Burdening Food Banks with the Charity of Waste

By Jocelyn Meyer Government Department, Colby College   Abstract This paper examines the structural issues represented by the Farmers to Families Food Box (FFFB) initiative rolled out by the U.S. government in response to rising levels of food insecurity during the COVID-19 pandemic. It addresses some of the concerns brought about in a letter written […]

Read more

A Collection of Poems: Mother Maine, Resilience, Between Disciplines

By Michelle de Leon Ecology and Environmental Sciences Department, University of Maine National Science Foundation Research Traineeship on Conservation Science   Mother Maine Maine is a place where I’m leaning into a state of tension. Clouds flood me as I navigate where is home. Who is home here?   She meanders from the shore to […]

Read more

Uncovering Big Data Bias in Sustainability Science

By Nick Record and Lourdes Vera   One of the most valuable resources in the world today is data. Data volume, velocity, variety, and veracity outline our notion of “big data,” and like a resource extracted from under the ground, big data is “mined” for value using artificial intelligence techniques. Sustainability sciences and practices are […]

Read more

Art Series: Baxter State Park

Photography by Sean Birkel Climate Change Institute, University of Maine   Spruce-Fir Broom-moss Forest, Daicey Pond, September 2019 Falls along Howe Brook, May 2005 Early Fall on the Traveler Loop Trail, September 2011 Katahdin from Tracy Pond, September 2009   About the Author Sean Birkel is a research assistant professor and the Maine State Climatologist, […]

Read more

Art Series: Views of Maine

Photography by Mariusz Potocki Mount Katahdin as viewed from Compass Pond. October 2020 Potato Island, Jericho Bay. August 2020  Lazygut Island, Jericho Bay. August 2020 Acadia National Park. January 2021 About the Author Glaciologist and photographer Mariusz Potocki is completing his doctorate degree at the University of Maine. He has participated in over 20 research […]

Read more

Observations at Boot Head Preserve in January

By Emily Guirl   The surf is audible from the trail head, also the erratic hooting of an offshore buoy. I stumble over raised roots, turn right at the fork.  The trees part at the first lookout. The water below is high and white, moving in all directions as it fills the tight cove at […]

Read more

A Collection of Poems: Creeper, Brown; Outside; Guilt Trip

By Lucia Owen   Creeper, Brown Indexed so in Sibley’s splendid bird book as if there were other Creepers, Blue and Red or Iridescent.   It lives, vertical and shy, on tree trunks. Minute, quick, and to say what I saw takes longer than the instant   a Brown Creeper took a bath in  a […]

Read more