Work on Stratton Brook Pond Road

A contractor for the Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands will be working on the Stratton Brook Pond Road (popular access to the west side of the Bigelows) around the third week of September (mostly on weekdays). They will be brushing out the sides of the road and then pulling the wood to spots along the road where it can be chipped, and trucked out. This road is narrow and the construction equipment is large so some closure of the road and parking areas may occur during this time.

Persons looking to hike the AT or Fire Warden’s trail are asked to park at the Rt. 27 parking area and begin the hike from there instead of the Stratton Brook Pond Road.

Frye Notch Privy

On August 12th, the Maine Appalachian Trail Club (MATC) will be airlifting lumber and tools to the Frye Notch campsite to build a new privy (NOBO mile 1,936.8).

Several MATC volunteers will be at the Frye Notch campsite assisting with the effort. Hikers should follow all instructions from volunteers and stay out of the immediate transport zone.

For questions or for more information, contact campsite@matc.org or 207-215-5306.

Request for Proposals for Training our Trail Crew in Trail Building for the Years 2024, 2025, 2026

Maine Appalachian Trail Club (MATC)

Request for Proposals for Training our Trail Crew in Trail Building for the Years 2024, 2025, 2026

Background – During the 2024, 2025, 2026 field seasons, the MATC’s Maine Trail Crew will work on remote sections of the Appalachian Trail.

Projects will focus on rebuilding and restoring heavily impacted sections of the Appalachian Trail. The Trail Crew will utilize rigging equipment and hand tools to build stone steps, stone stairs, waterbars, and complete short relocations.

Scope of Work – To provide five days of training each of the three years to the Maine Trail Crew staff (5 people) consisting of:

  • Three days of training in advanced trail construction and safety practices focused on stone cutting, stone waterbars, stone stairs, step stones, retaining walls, and trail relocations.
  • Two days of training in rigging systems. Training will be based in Skowhegan, with possible nearby field trips to locations which provide better training opportunities.
  • The contractor is not required to provide equipment although demonstration of new state of the art tools and equipment would be welcome.

Time Frame for completion of project (start to finish)

–   Between May 20-31 2024

  • Between May 19-30, 2025
  • Between May 18-29, 2026

Due date for a lump sum project quote – 5:00 PM Eastern time, August 24, 2023. 

Contractors interested in submitting a proposal must send an email to coordinator@matc.org expressing their interest no later than 5:00 PM Eastern time August 11, 2023 in order to be eligible to submit. Proposal on August 24th and to receive any amendments to the Request for Proposals.

Proposals must Include

• Resume of the person who will be instructing the crew detailing their experience in training trail crews in the skills referenced in the scope of work. 

• Brief curriculum of the training

  • A lump sum price for completing the training for all three years

Prior to award of the contact, the selected Contractor will be required to provide the following:

  • Workers’ compensation coverage, unless exempt by law and ensure that its Subcontractors, if any, comply with these requirements.
  • General Liability Insurance:
  • Must name MATC as additional insured.  
  • Coverage limits: $1,000,000 per occurrence/$2,000,000 aggregate
  • Auto: Coverage limit of $1,000,000 

Questions should be submitted in writing by email to coordinator@matc.org by 5:00 PM Eastern time, August 11, 2023. A written response to any questions will be emailed to all parties who have expressed their interest in the project.

MATC will select the contractor based on qualifications and price by September 22, 2023 and reserves the right to reject any and all proposals.

MATC Annual Meeting

Please join us at the Annual Meeting, held in person for the first time since 2019.

Saturday, April 22, 2023, 9 am – 4 pm

Schair-Swenson-Watson Alumni Center, Colby College, Waterville, ME (Directions)

Schair-Swenson Alumni Center at Colby College
  • Free registration.
  • Lunch available at campus dining hall for $10.  CREDIT CARD ONLY. Or bring your own.
  • On-campus parking.
  • Registration opens at 8 am.

Hear what’s going on in the club. Get ready for a successful season. Highlights include: 

  • A conversation with keynote speaker Barry Dana, a former Penobscot chief and artist who runs the 100 Mile Wilderness. Bring your questions.
  • “Ask Me Anything” panel discussion with the ATC and the MATLT.
  • A Day in the Life of a Ridgerunner presentation
  • Annual club business
  • Ask Me Anything panel discussion with campsite, corridor monitoring, and trail maintenance managers
  • Raffle tickets – Cash only

Barry Dana

Barry Dana is a teacher, artist, and former chief of the Penobscot Nation. He grew up on Indian Island in the Penobscot River, where he learned traditional skills and values from tribal elders. Barry creates traditional styles of birchbark baskets, many etched with artwork or quill decoration. Credited with reviving the Katahdin 100, a Native spiritual run that combines a 100-mile trek by canoe, bike, and foot from Indian Island to Katahdin, Dana also runs the 100 Mile Wilderness to Katahdin. When he does he brings an energy drink he makes with a birch syrup from trees tapped in his backyard, trekking poles he carved from hophornbeam wood, a sheath knife, and an eagle feather, which connects him to his ancestors. “When I run,” he has said, “it’s not just for me. It’s for my people.”See the Annual Meeting webpage for details.

Advisory to Appalachian Trail Certified Sawyers on Battery-Electric Chainsaw Use

While corded electric chainsaws have been available for years, over the last decade, chainsaw construction design has evolved to include battery‐powered cordless designs. As these quieter, lighter tools have become increasingly available, there is increasing likelihood that A.T. Certified Sawyers would prefer to apply these tools in lieu of gas‐powered chainsaws in the course of their work to maintain the A.T.

This advisory aims to provide reasonable considerations to the benefits, drawbacks, and other considerations of these respective design models of saws, that all require adherence to accepted safety practices.

Read full Advisory below

Summer 2023 Trail Crew Projects

The Maine Trail Crew is a joint venture between the Maine AT Club and the Appalachian Trail Conservancy that is dedicated to repairing steep and washed-out sections of the AT.
Volunteers are welcome to join us for one to six weeks from June 19 – August 24, 2023.
Projects run from Monday morning (you must arrive Sunday by 4pm) to Thursday or Friday.

Check out the Summer Project List below.
For more information about Volunteering with the Maine Trail Crew click here.

Maine Lobster Now Sponsors MATC

MATC is happy to announce that Maine Lobster Now is now a sponsor!

Maine Lobster Now’s mission is to provide customers throughout the United States with access to fresh seafood. Located in Southern Maine, they are dedicated to establishing lasting relationships with local fishermen in an effort to support the local economy and to continue offering the best products available.

MATC Ridge Runner Program

Submitted by Janice Clain

The MATC Ridgerunners are in the field, monitoring high traffic and sensitive eco-systems at three strategic locations along the AT. Returning this season to Gulf Hagas is Robyn Crisp, an avid long-distance hiker who calls Colorado home. She started her season at the northern end of the Hundred Mile Wilderness, ready to meet southbound thru hikers to give them advice about safety, packing and enjoying and protecting the wilderness. She moved to Gulf Hagas in late June, and spends her duty time there interacting with AT thru hikers passing north and south, section hikers knocking off the Monson to Abol miles, and day hikers, many of whom have heard about the beautiful waterfalls but have little or no experience with the rigors of hiking or how to interact safely with the challenging terrain. 

After a season as the ATC Ridge Runner along the Golden Road, Matt Shannon returns to the Bigelow position, based at Horns Pond. Matt is a Connecticut native who thru hiked in 2018, and worked for MATC in 2019. Matt was so impressed by the culture and countryside in Maine that he moved here for good. He has arranged his schedule this summer so that he can make longer ridge runs along the Trail in the Bigelow District.

Chloe Kenyon is the newcomer to the Maine Appalachian Trail Club after thru hiking last season. She hails from Maine, although she has experiences with other parts of the country. Her post for the season is Saddleback with its challenge to protect the fragile alpine zone so accessible to hikers along the AT as well as those who take advantage of the trails up the ski slopes, and even via the ski lift. Her base of operations is at Piazza Rock, the campsite popular with families and with summer camp groups. 

MATC, through the Ridgerunner / CARE Committee and in conjunction with ATC staff, provides various trainings for MATC and ATC Ridgerunners. Prior to beginning their season at the end of May, Ridgerunners reviewed established Trail ethics principles, engaged in scenarios that would help them manage hiker behavior, met with key MATC partners, including the Kennebec Ferry service, and a representative from the MATC Campsite Committee. In June they met on Saddleback to learn about alpine plants and with Baxter State Park staff to learn about messaging on Park expectations to convey to long distance hikers as they approach their end-of-Trail goal. 

The Ridgerunner (CARE) Committee provides opportunities throughout the season for ridge runners to meet for other trainings and to share experiences with and tips for managing hikers. The three MATC Ridgerunners met recently at Gulf Hagas for a workshop on Corridor Monitoring, provided by Janice Clain. In mid-August they will meet Dan Simonds in the Bigelow Preserve for a lesson in forest management and identification of tree species.

After a 2021 season learning to adapt to pandemic protocols for Trail usage and interactions with hikers, ridge runners report a gradual return to less restrictive measures. They’re meeting more summer camp groups using the Trail, and are anticipating the late August influx of college orientation groups. 

Ridgerunners report back to supervisors the words of praise from hikers for the high Trail maintenance standards of MATC volunteers as well their appreciation for the quality of the accommodations at campsites, especially the “state-of-the-art” [back country] privies. MATC members are encouraged to visit with Ridge Runners when they’re out on the Trail. Ask them about their work and let them know that club members appreciate their efforts to protect the Trail that we value so much.

Maine Trail Crew Report

Submitted by Janice Clain

After the forced suspension of the program in 2020, the Maine Trail Crew is gradually returning to its pre-pandemic model based on a paid staff supplemented by volunteers. Due to COVID restrictions, the Trail Crew operated in 2021 as two four-person paid teams and completed most of the projects originally scheduled for both the 2020 and 2021 seasons. With the loosening of pandemic limitations, MATC hired a four-person professional crew supplemented by a base camp coordinator. The Maine Trail Crew Committee considers itself fortunate that four of last season’s paid staff were so satisfied with their experience that they enthusiastically hired on for another season, and they have welcomed this season’s volunteers, four per week, who have chosen to give from one to six weeks of their time to work on the AT in Maine.

Crew Leader Matt Kusper, hails from North Carolina. After thru hiking, he worked with trail crews in a number of locations before coming to Maine in 2021. He benefited from Lester Kenway’s trail construction training, and has been eager to share his expertise with his teammates and with volunteers. Jared Clough, from New Hampshire, was happy to hear last winter that Matt planned to return to Maine, and he joined the crew as Assistant Leader. Noah Korpi grew up in Minnesota and joined the Maine Trail Crew for the 2021 season. While working grooming ski trails in Colorado last winter, he, too, responded to messaging from MATC and decided to spend another season working in Maine. Dylan Flewelling joined the crew this season, and quickly adapted to the team. He is from central Maine and is a student at Colby-Sawyer College, in New Hampshire. The team is supported by Rob Cusimano, from Alabama, the fourth member of the 2021 team. While he enjoyed the physicality of trail work last summer, he has found his niche as Base Camp Coordinator. His job includes providing food for the crew and volunteers, at base camp and the work site, coordinating communications between MATC and Lake George Regional Park officials, (where the crew is housed), promoting MATC’s image in the Skowhegan community, and supporting the volunteers who supplement the crew each week.

The Maine Trail Crew is housed this summer at the Lake George facility where they meet in the “Dance Hall,” which was once a social center for the park, and sleep in wall tents. MATC has negotiated an arrangement that includes a modest rental fee and help with constructing trails in the park. Staff and volunteers have access to the recreational facilities in the park and to social opportunities in the greater community. Club member, Patty Harding, has lent several canoes and kayaks for MATC use.

The professional crew met for training with Lester Kenway in mid-May. Their first projects as a team were in Baxter State Park. In late June they welcomed their first volunteers and quickly adapted their routine to include basic training in use and safety measures with tools and techniques for building trail infrastructure. They have also incorporated weekly de-briefings post-project, listening to volunteer comments and recommendations, intent on improving the program and the volunteer experience. All volunteers were interviewed and informed of expectations by Club Coordinator, Holly Sheehan, prior to signing on to participate. 

Projects for the Trail Crew for the rest of the season, until the end of September, include six weeks on Third Mountain and three weeks each on West Peak of White Cap, Rainbow Lake, and Nahmakanta Stream.

The Maine Trail Crew Committee includes Brad Deane, Janice Clain, Ethan Duffany, Margaret Snell, Michaela Schoeffler, and Patty Harding, with leadership from co-chairs Bruce Grant, who handles lodging and transportation logistics, and Sue Lussier, who manages all personnel issues. Club Coordinator, Holly Sheehan, ATC Regional Resources Director, Paige MacGregor, and ATC Field Coordinator, Blake Garrison, provide much needed program support. 

Members of the Trail Crew Committee have scheduled site visits to each of the Trail Crew projects, but welcome club members who would like to see the crew in action and offer their support. Contact Holly Sheehan for information and when and where to find the crew and see the amazing work they accomplish.