I have archived the March 2023 water level chart (at left). We experienced two large rain events during the month with the result that there was water flowing over the top of the dam for the entire month. The first storm which started on April 30th and ended 3 days later kind of caught us by surprise. It went stationary, ultimately dumping 5 inches of rain on us and raising the lake level to +0.77 above the high water mark, the highest water level we’ve recorded since we purchased the dam back in the fall of 2018. The previous high was +0.58 feet back in April 2020. We thought that was pretty high! At its peak height on May 1st there was over a foot of water flowing over the dam. Then on the 22nd we received 2.65 inches of rain which raised the lake level to +0.28 feet above the high water mark. All told we received 5.40 inches of rain in May, 1.7 inches more than normal. Despite below average precipitation in February and March, for the year we’re 3.79 inches ahead of normal on this date. Continue reading
Yearly Archives: 2023
2023 Spring/Summer Newsletter Is Out
The Spring/Summer 2023 Clary Lake Association Newsletter went in the mail about a week ago and is now available for download from our Newsletters page. Feel free to grab a copy and share it with your family and friends. Dues envelopes were included in the mailing, and I expect dues to start arriving any day. I’ll be updating the “Next Year’s 2023/2024 Membership List” as checks arrive. This year we totally met our Membership goal of 175 Members. Our Membership goal for the coming year includes a modest increase to 180 Members. Totally doable. You can help us reach (or exceed!) that goal by becoming a member today! Visit our Benefits of Membership page for more information about why you should join the Association, and how to do it.
Here’s a link to the Newsletter:
Our newsletter is mailed to about 250 people including all Clary Lake shore owners (check out our Parcel Map) which includes approximately 100 properties (almost 2/3 of which are represented in our Membership). If you’d like to receive a paper copy of our newsletter, send your name and mailing address to secretary@clarylake.org and we’ll put you on our list. Of course, you could also just join the Association 🙂
Upcoming Ice Cream Social and Meet & Greet Event
Mark Your Calendars! Our Annual Ice Cream Social and “Meet & Greet” event will be held on Saturday, July 15th from 1:00 PM to whenever, at the Clary Lake dam on the Mills Road (Route 218) in Whitefield. In the unlikely event of inclement weather, the rain date is the next day, Sunday July 16th, same time, same ice cream. We postponed this event in 2020 and 2021 out of an abundance of caution, due to the pandemic. This will be a great opportunity to meet some of the many new CLA members and other people on and around Clary Lake. This event is open to all, not just Clary Lake Association members. The ice cream is free but donations will be gratefully accepted.
Summer 2023 Raffle
This event is also a great opportunity to buy raffle tickets to support the Clary Lake Association’s Dam Repair Fundraising initiative. Talk about a worthwhile goal! First prize is a Masterbuilt Digital Charcoal Grill + Smoker donated by Louis Doe Garden Center. There are 3 great gift certificates for runner up prizes. Tickets are $5 each or 5 for $20. For more information about the Raffle and how/where to get tickets see the Summer 2023 Raffle page.
In addition to our regular ice cream offerings, Linda Gallion will once again be bringing a couple of buckets of her own very excellent home made ice cream (this year it’s going to be Blueberry and Strawberry). Linda and her husband Rick run the Clary Lake Bed & Breakfast. In addition to all the popular ice cream toppings, this year we’re going to have sugar cones which I have it on good authority are the environmentally friendly way to eat ice cream 🙂
Plan on coming and staying a while. There will be tables and chairs set up so you can sit and linger with friends, awnings to get out of the sun, and water to keep you hydrated… and most importantly—plenty of ice cream! There is also ample parking and you can always come by boat, kayak, or canoe. We hope to see you there!!
We’ve added this event to our Events Calendar and here’s a link to add it to your calendar. We’re posting about it early because summer is short and weekends fill up fast! We’ll post a reminder here as the event approaches! Stay tuned!
Clary Lake Birding and Marsh Paddle Event Reminder
This event notice was originally posted back on March 14th when it was still a lot like winter around here. At that time perhaps you weren’t thinking about a marsh paddle! We’re reposting now in the hopes of getting a few more people to sign up for this unique opportunity!
In what is becoming a most welcome annual event, experienced Clary Lake birder Malcolm Burson has offered to guide a small group of kayakers and canoeists on an early summer Birding event up into the great Marsh at the outlet of Clary Lake. Both Malcolm and his partner Eleanor Goldberg are long time birders with considerable experience spotting and identifying birds. The tentative date of the tour (to be confirmed as it nears) is Saturday, May 27th, with Sunday the 28th as a rain date. The event is expected to last about an hour and a half. To keep the group small and intimate, we’d like to limit participation to no more than 5-7 kayaks or canoes (no motorboats please, but electric motors are OK). We’ll be filling slots on a first come, first serve basis. If there is sufficient interest we’ll schedule a second event later in the summer on a date to be determined.
Participants are asked to gather at 6:30 AM at the shoreline of the property of Malcolm Burson and Eleanor Goldberg, located at the far northwesterly end of the Lake, near the entrance to the channel (Google Map). Their camp is the last place down at the end of Hornpout Lane if you’re coming by car, but be advised parking is limited! It’s much easier to simply paddle over to their place. Traveling down the channel and through the marsh that leads to the dam is a world of wonder. The particular focus on this tour will be the bird life that lives there with the goal being to listen to birds as much as look for them! Bring a pair of binoculars!!
If you’re interested in attending but don’t have a watercraft of your own, we can arrange for you to borrow one, either a kayak or canoe, which ever you’re most comfortable using. Please supply your own floatation device.
To sign up for this Birding event or if you have questions about it, please send an email to paddle@clarylake.org and we’ll get back to you.
Clary_cam3 On the Blink
Some of you may have noticed that Clary_cam3 stopped updating a couple of days ago. I try to remember to check them daily but a few days went by before I noticed #3 was not working. I think some water managed to seep into it. I’ve got a few used cameras laying around and I’ve been testing two of them for possible replacements. This one shows promise; if it’s still uploading and accepting connections by tomorrow afternoon I’ll install it. In the meantime, enjoy the view out my computer room window!
April 2023 Water Level Chart Archived
I have archived the March 2023 water level chart (at left). It looked like the dearth of precipitation that’s characterized February and March was going to continue through April, until the last day of the month when we received a whopping 2.52 inches of rain. The storm has continued into today, the first day of May with an additional 1.98 inches bringing the storm total to 4.64 inches! As of the end of April, accumulated precipitation for the year was 15.54 inches (it’s more than that today), fully 2.1 inches above normal for this date. At the time of this writing, this impressive overnight rainfall has raised the lake level to +0.85 (152.02 feet) which is the highest level we’ve recorded since we purchased the dam in the Fall of 2018. Peak runoff typically occurs 24 hours after the rain event, so I have not doubt that the lake level will rise higher. You’ll want to keep your eye on the Current Water Level Chart.
Here’s a picture I took this morning (at left) when the flows over the dam were around 268 cfs (cubic feet per second). Since then the lake has come up another 3 inches. I checked the level just before dark and it was up to +0.89 feet. The previous record water level since we purchased the dam in October 2018 was achieved on April 14, 2020 topped and out at +0.58 feet above the HWM. We’re over 3 inches above that already! Chester Chase owned the dam for nearly 50 years and his son Tim assures me that he’s seen it this high and higher during the years he spent growing up in Whitefield. Albert Boynton, who was born in the red house on the dam and whose family owned the dam back in the 1920s and early 1930s once told me that he remembers seeing the lake so high it was running over the road. That’s high!
The flow numbers for the April 30 storm are impressive! You can see that the daily outflows in acre-feet (43,560 cubic feet) of water so far this year (the blue line in the chart at left) have been pretty sedate so far this year until yesterday when they went through the roof with 605 acre-feet. Thanks to the storm, a wee bit more than 1 full lake volume of water (7,224 acre-feet) has flowed downstream so far this year. A lot of sediment washed into the lake during this storm, which is generally a bad thing. On the other hand, a lot of that water flowed right out again. It remains to be seen how this will impact our lake water quality this year.
I can write all day long about how high the water was, but there’s nothing quite like a video to convey an impression. I’ve already posted a video I took over at the dam yesterday morning. Here it is again:
High Water!
Impressive overtopping at the Clary Lake dam this morning!
2022/2023 Water Column Newsletter Available
Summer 2023 Raffle!
We held the drawing at the conclusion of our Annual Meeting yesterday afternoon, September 2nd. The winner of the grill was Cheryl Willis, the Winner of the L.L. Bean gift card was Linda Gallion, the winner of the Reny’s gift card was Geraldine Hull (wife of Paul Barton), and the winner of the Sheepscot General gift certificate was Lee Sledjeski (a friend of our new President, Gareth Bowen). There was an additional 5th prize made and graciously donated by Linda Clark, wife of Alan Clark, a lovely sun catcher and a pendant made with real flowers (picture at left). This unexpected lovely final runner up prize was won by Steve Cowles daughter-in-law, Jess Puth.
We’ll be collecting the grill from Louis Doe Garden Center this coming week and delivering it to it’s new home.
All told we raised $2335 for our Dam Repair Fund bringing the fund balance to an impressive $26,310. We would like to thank EVERYONE who bought tickets this year for helping support our dam repair efforts.
The Second Annual Clary Lake Association Raffle is underway! Once again, Mark & Tara Doe of Louis Doe Garden Center in Newcastle have graciously donated our First Prize, a Masterbuilt Digital Charcoal Grill + Smoker (pictured at left) with a retail price of $599. To increase your chances of winning something, we have three runner up prizes too! Our 1st runner up prize is a $250 Gift Certificate from LL Bean in Freeport. Our 2nd runner up prize is a $100 Renys Gift Certificate, and our 3rd runner up prize is a $50 gift certificate from Sheepscot General. Tickets cost $5 each or 5 tickets for $20.
The drawing for the raffle will be held at the Clary Lake Association’s Annual Meeting on Saturday September 2nd at the Clary Lake dam on Route 218 in Whitefield. The meeting starts at 2PM and usually goes for about an hour and a half. We’ll hold the drawing at the conclusion of the Membership Meeting. There is no limit to the number of tickets you can buy so if you want to increase your chances of winning, buy a lot!
Why Are We Raising Money?
We are raising money for our Clary Lake Dam Maintenance and Repair fund. The dam is in reasonable shape now but it leaks, and leaks only get worse, not better. Someday in the not too distant future we’re going to have to make some costly repairs to the dam and gate mechanism. This is your chance to help fund that effort and maybe win something as well. Sadly, money that you spend on raffle tickets is not tax deductible, even if given to a nonprofit organization such as the Clary Lake Association. Sorry! If you WOULD like to make a tax deductible contribution, please visit our Donate to the Association page!
Here’s what our tickets look like. You keep the big part. We keep the small part:
YOU DO NOT NEED TO BE PRESENT TO WIN! Make sure that you write your contact info (at least your first name and phone number) on the back of the ticket stub so we can reach out to you to let you know you won. Gift certificates can be mailed. Particulars for claiming the 1st prize will be furnished at a later date.
How To Get Tickets
There are lots of ways you can get raffle tickets:
- Make out a check made out to Clary Lake Association and mail it to PO Box 127, Whitefield ME 04353 and we’ll mail you your tickets! How easy is that?
- We’ll be sending out our Summer 2023 Newsletter soon with an included Dues envelope. Just include your ticket money with your dues and we’ll mail your your tickets! 2 birds with one stamp!
- If you know a Board member, go see them, they’ll have tickets to sell.
- We’d like to make it easy to buy tickets! You can simply email your name, mailing address, and phone number to ticketsales@clarylake.org and someone will call to make arrangements to meet up with you to get you some tickets!
- Tickets will be available at the Annual Meeting on Saturday September 2nd from about 1PM until the drawing.
- You can buy tickets at the Clary Lake Association’ Ice Cream Social (Saturday July 15th)
- Starting in June, we plan to have a table set up to sell tickets at the Whitefield Recycling Center (and possibly other places to be announced); stop by and grab some tickets!
- You can use the button below to buy tickets and pay for them with a credit card or with your Paypal account. Make sure we have your full name, mailing address and email address and we’ll put your tickets in the mail to you and put your ticket stubs in the bucket with all the rest. How easy is that!
We’re continuing to work on easy ways to see you tickets. Stay tuned for future announcements!
7 April 2023: Spring Turnover and More!
I stopped at the boat launch the other day to check out the waves, and I was not disappointed! It’s windy days like this in the early Spring that churn up the lake water, mixing it together from top to bottom in a process known as Spring Turnover. The water column ends up with a uniform (and cold) temperature and the oxygen profile is similarly homogenous. Then throughout the course of the summer, the lake water stratifies with the surface warming up while remaining cold down below the thermocline. Then same turnover thing happens in the Fall, mixing the water once again. It’s an endless cycle: Spring turnover, Summer Stratification, and Fall turnover.
This video not only shows this turnover process taking place, you can also see the lines of white froth resulting from Langmuir Rotation.
April 3, 2023 Ice Out, Finally!
I consulted with David Hodsdon a little bit ago and we are in agreement: the conditions for calling Ice Out on Clary Lake have been achieved. There’s still one small ice floe still drifting around down in the east end of the lake but it is not attached to the shore, it is visibly shrinking by the hour, and it will likely be gone by morning. It is not preventing circumnavigation of the lake.
The winner of the First Prize of a $25 Gift Certificate from The Jefferson Scoop is Gayle Knight! Congratulations Gayle! She was the only person to have guessed today’s date, hence there are no runners up. However, I’d still like to offer runner up prizes of a laminated 8.5″ x 11″ Clary Lake Depth map to the 4 people who guessed tomorrow, April 4th. They are: Sarah Hazelton, David Marsh, Brian Vogel, and Beverley Bowen. I’ll email you and let you know how to collect your prize!
I’d like to thank everyone for playing, it’s been fun.
Almost Ice Out…
Live! From Clary Lake!
How many of you ever click on the “Live Stream in your browser” link on the Webcams page? I know the webcams themselves are very popular (22 people have looked at Clarycam-1 today alone), but I have no metrics on use of the live-view offered. My old visitor stats plugin used to show exterior links that people clicked on, but the plugin I’m currently using only shows local pages. I’m just curious! I could go grep through the weblogs to find that information, but that’s pretty tedious.
I check all three live feeds every day just to make sure they’re working OK. The level of service we’re using is free, but I have to periodically reactivate the cameras every once in a while. I’m just curious how many of our visitors check them out. Leave a comment!
March 2023 Water Level Chart Archived
I have archived the March 2023 water level chart (at left). The precipitation deficit we saw in February continued into March with only about 2.5 inches of precipitation falling, well below the average for March of 3.77 inches. However, due to the excess precipitation we received in January, we’re still 1.5 inches ahead of normal for this date. March is when we start the process of gradually raising the lake level by adding stop logs to the weir, while at the same time trying to maintain minimum flows to sustain the downstream aquatic habitat. We could really use some extra water in March to help with this process, but it didn’t happen this year. Given the conflicting mandates in the Water Level Order i.e., raising the lake level to it’s full capacity by ice out AND maintaining minimum flows at the same time, it’s a rare year when we can accomplish both! Usually something has to give and raising the lake level to where it belongs in the spring is our number one priority. We did succeed in gradually raising the lake level about a foot over the course of the month to within 1/2 a foot of the HWM, by the end of the month. With close to a half inch of rain falling on this first day of April, we should be overtopping the dam shortly. No fooling! Continue reading
30 March 2023 Ice Is On The Way Out
2023 Ice Out Update
Patience! It ain’t out yet but it’s getting closer! You can see what appears to be open water on the far side of the lake on this web cam picture, but it’s not open, it’s just dark water logged ice and it’s more like a large section in the middle of the lake. I wouldn’t be walking around out there anymore.
The Vernal Equinox Has Arrived!
Well we’ve made it through another Winter, and for some of us it’s been particularly trying one. But today, finally, and despite the temperature, Spring is definitely in the air. At 5:24 PM this afternoon the Sun, in it’s apparent path around the Earth, will cross the Earth’s equator on it’s way North. It’s the Vernal Equinox, the day when the Sun rises directly Due East and sets directly Due West and the length of the day and night is equal. From now until the Summer Solstice in June, the days will be getting longer and the nights shorter. Summer is on the way 🙂
Ice-Out Contest Closed to New Entries
I’ve closed the 2023 Ice Out contest to new entries. Now we wait! We’ve got 38 ice out guestimates ranging from tomorrow March 17th (sorry no way!) to April 25th (could happen!). I have no idea if there’s thin ice out there yet or not, but looking out my upstairs office window at the lake today I can see the lake surface has taken on a gray cast indicating there’s water soaked snow on top now. You can’t see that on the Webcams because the images are overexposed, but it’s there. Wet snow on the ice combined with a higher sun angle and warmer temps means winter is coming to an end and the ice’s days are numbered.
Stay tuned!
Clary Lake Birding and Marsh Paddle Event
In what is becoming a most welcome annual event, experienced Clary Lake birder Malcolm Burson has offered to guide a small group of kayakers and canoeists on an early summer Birding event up into the great Marsh at the outlet of Clary Lake. Both Malcolm and his partner Eleanor Goldberg are long time birders with considerable experience spotting and identifying birds. The tentative date of the tour (to be confirmed as it nears) is Saturday, May 27th, with Sunday the 28th as a rain date. The event is expected to last about an hour and a half. To keep the group small and intimate, we’d like to limit participation to no more than 5-7 kayaks or canoes (no motorboats please, but electric motors are OK). We’ll be filling slots on a first come, first serve basis. If there is sufficient interest we’ll schedule a second event later in the summer on a date to be determined. Continue reading
[UPDATE] Time is Running Out to Enter the Ice Out Contest!
Time is running out to enter the 2023 Ice Out Contest! We’ll be stopping accepting guesses at the end of the day on Wednesday, March 15th. There are currently 29 guesses. It’s not cheating to look at our Ice In and Ice Out Dates page! You’ll find a description of the prizes, the contest rules, and the entry form here: 2023 Clary Lake Ice Out Contest!
[UPDATE] Remember, you can enter more than once but only your LAST entry will count!
Here are the guesses so far:
2023 Ice Out Guestimates
These are the guesses for ice out. The timestamp column will be used to decide on who was first in the event of a tie. I'll try and keep this more or less up to date. Hint: you can sort on any of the columns by clicking on the header:Timestamp | Your name: | Ice Out Guess: |
---|---|---|
3/12/2023 19:22:09 | Sue Webb | 3/17/2023 |
3/1/2023 14:22:10 | Stephen Viti | 3/21/2023 |
3/13/2023 23:19:11 | Megan Luisi | 3/22/2023 |
3/1/2023 14:08:55 | Randall B Wing | 3/23/2023 |
3/1/2023 16:41:05 | Jack Holland | 3/23/2023 |
3/1/2023 11:06:25 | Karen Stutzer | 3/24/2023 |
3/1/2023 12:36:22 | June Relyea | 3/26/2023 |
3/1/2023 16:06:19 | Anya Lagasse | 3/26/2023 |
3/1/2023 13:47:45 | Jay Bridgforth | 3/27/2023 |
3/4/2023 11:40:18 | Carolyn Curtis | 3/27/2023 |
3/1/2023 16:13:16 | Dan Burns | 3/28/2023 |
3/1/2023 21:04:18 | Sophie Seba | 3/28/2023 |
3/1/2023 16:50:39 | Megan Breece | 3/29/2023 |
3/8/2023 8:53:45 | Linda S Gallion | 3/30/2023 |
3/2/2023 18:16:36 | Thomas Gillette | 3/31/2023 |
3/6/2023 16:42:51 | Cheryl Smith | 3/31/2023 |
3/10/2023 11:35:09 | Steve Relyea | 4/1/2023 |
3/13/2023 18:59:22 | Ronnie Spann | 4/1/2023 |
3/12/2023 14:04:17 | Rick Gallion | 4/2/2023 |
3/14/2023 12:06:28 | Gayle Knight | 4/3/2023 |
3/1/2023 13:41:57 | Sarah Hazelton | 4/4/2023 |
3/1/2023 19:40:31 | David L Marsh | 4/4/2023 |
3/8/2023 10:48:13 | Brian Vogel | 4/4/2023 |
3/13/2023 18:06:57 | Beverley Bowen | 4/4/2023 |
3/1/2023 15:54:06 | Julie Anderson | 4/5/2023 |
3/3/2023 8:35:39 | Cindy Norman | 4/5/2023 |
3/1/2023 11:39:48 | Bill Hall | 4/6/2023 |
3/10/2023 10:19:24 | Michelle Pinkham | 4/6/2023 |
3/14/2023 12:08:25 | David Knight | 4/7/2023 |
3/10/2023 10:20:24 | Steve Pinkham | 4/9/2023 |
3/1/2023 16:56:40 | Dedi Rapp | 4/10/2023 |
3/15/2023 10:05:50 | Vicky Grimaldi | 4/12/2023 |
3/15/2023 11:23:56 | Ellis Percy | 4/12/2023 |
3/4/2023 11:29:37 | June m Lordi | 4/10/2023 |
3/1/2023 13:44:12 | DONNA Roeckel | 4/13/2023 |
3/13/2023 20:24:48 | Wynne Keller | 4/13/2023 |
3/13/2023 19:02:50 | Charlene Andersen | 4/14/2023 |
3/1/2023 13:08:23 | Kate Seba | 4/25/2023 |