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Frank Burroughs, winner of the 2009 John Burroughs Medal for Nature Writing for his work Confluence: Merrymeeting Bay, spoke about it and his newest book, The View From Here, Reflections on the Deep North and the Wild East at the Curtis Memorial Library on Tuesday, March 11, 2025. The Burroughs Medal has been awarded to luminaries such as John McPhee and Rachel Carson. It was said that, among her many accolades, the Burroughs Medal was the one Rachel Carson coveted. It was a privilege to hear Frank read and tell stories. .

"Guzzle." Why Books Are So Much Better Than The Internet.

Benet Pols March 14, 2025

guzzle (guz’l), n I. n. 4. A drain or ditch; sometimes, a small stream. Also called a guzzen. Halliwell. [Prov. Eng.]

Or why books are so much better than the internet.

It showed up a few times in Franklin Burroughs’s John Burroughs Medal winner, Confluence: Merrymeeting Bay. For instance, “In May when the wild rice and bullrushes are just stubble on the mudflats, (carp) become active, feeding up into guzzles as the tide rises, fanning out as it covers the flats.”

The context reveals that a guzzle is something that maintains some amount of water even when the tide is out, but how it is distinguished from a runnel, stream, or rivulet was hard to tell. The lessor of the four? Or perhaps somewhere in the middle. Certainly not larger than a stream or a creek. But what exactly, I could not tell. More important what are the origins of the word?

Later I gathered it may be bigger than a runnel, a word I had heard before. I had read about eels inhabiting tiny runnels “of water not deep enough to cover their backs.”

The dictionary that comes baked into my Mac wasn’t much help. Although it’s never great on etymology it does have a pretty good thesaurus. Good enough that you can usually back out distinctions in meaning from the collections of synonyms and antonyms

The on line dictionaries were terrible. Able only to give just the shortest of shrifts to the possibility of guzzling or gobbling food, “gourmandizing.”  But really the on line sources just wanted to tell me about booze. A fine topic in the right context but pretty tedious once ads for shot glasses and what-not started rolling in to crowd out what you really want to know.

The internet is hell (he wrote on the internet).

But then the unabridged Century Dictionary, 1914 edition, in 10 volumes with companion volumes on proper names and geographic names, graces a full shelf and half in my home. It is old and looks impressive. You can find it listed for sale for two-hundred dollars or so. One-fifty seems like the low end of what current owners hope for. My practice, if selling, would be to aim even lower. But at three feet of shelving and weighing in at eighty-four pounds it is difficult to see the margin.  After shipping and the hassle of packaging are considered, the effort and cost of getting it to a buyer make the curb seem like a likely option once the personal representatives of my estate arrive on the scene.

But now, I have another good reason to just let it sit there until the next time the internet fails me:



guzzle (guz’l), n I. n. 4. A drain or ditch; sometimes, a small stream. Also called a guzzen. Halliwell. [Prov. Eng.]



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Postscripts

I. As it turns out Frank Burroughs was equally curious about the word guzzle and had traced a similar path to find its meaning, though he consulted the thirteen volume Oxford English Dictionary, along with the four volume Dictionary of American Regional English.

Had I had the patience to read all the way to the end of Confluence before embarking on this search I would have learned Frank had done the research for me. In an essay near the end of Confluence Frank writes about what he calls OGL, or Old Growth Language. A glossary of sorts tracking the origins and use of regional language around Merrymeeting Bay. OGL, he writes is “something deeply rooted in a location that hasn’t been drastically disturbed for a long time; something less frequently met in the present than in the past, and that may not be met with at all in the future.”

It is difficult not to draw parallels between the loss of habitat at Merrymeeting Bay and the loss of language.

II. Frank Burroughs has a new book out: The View From Here; Reflections on the Deep North and the Wild East. This new collection includes brief essays originally published in Down East magazine's "Room With a View" column and a selection of previously uncollected essays. Ranging from coastal South Carolina to Northern Quebec, and from his childhood to the present, these essays meet at the intersection of human history, natural history, and biography.

Frank read just recently at Curtis Memorial Library from one essay about work he had had as a young man in forestry in Northern Quebec.

III. A Room With a View in Down East is currently written by my sister, Mary Pols. I should have gotten a photo of the two of them together.


IV. Down East Books had had plans to re-release Confluence in August 2025 but those plans have evidently been put on the back burner, which is a shame. It is a book that everyone who loves the natural world, language, and language about the natural world should explore.

V. You can read more of my thoughts on Confluence, The John Burroughs Award, nature writing, Rachel Carson, Merrymeeting Bay and the Androscoggin River here.

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In Brunswick, Maine, Maine Photographer, nature Tags Androscoggin River, Bowdoin College, conservation, land trust, Maine Books, Maine
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Famed Broadcaster Dale Arnold Visits Six Rivers Youth Sports to Help Raise The Rink!

Benet Pols January 5, 2024

Dale Arnold, with a timbre and face familiar to legions of New England Sports fans as the voice of, among others, the Boston Bruins and the New England Patriots, paid a visit to the Six Rivers Youth Sports Complex in Topsham and met with board president Bill Patterson and his team to review the plans for the new ice arena, hear about fundraising, tour the existing indoor turf facility, and to lend his support.

For many in attendance Dale’s tones and presence go back to his days on WBOR broadcasting Bowdoin College Hockey during the Polar Bears’ legendary Championship runs under iconic Coach Sid Watson or, even further, to the sidelines of the gridiron on McKeen Street in Brunswick where Dale cut his teeth as a teen doing play-by-play for Dragon football at WCME.

Dale’s embrace of Six Rivers Youth Sports’ mission was palpable the moment he mentioned his daughter’s hockey career. Dale noted that while he had lettered in four sports in high school he never played hockey himself but did become that most dutiful and passionate of all sports parents—a Hockey Dad. Dale has shivered by the glass in the early morning hours, been to rinks in the remotest corners of New England and the Maritimes, and spent nights in threadbare motels as knee hockey games raged in the corridors until all hours.

Dale knows the importance of local, public ice. Dale knows the importance of youth sports. And Dale knows the importance of inclusive opportunities.

With board members spanning the generations, reminisces flew. Doug Morrell, Brunswick High ’69 skated on the first artificial ice in the region when Bowdoin’s storied Dayton Area opened in 1956. He and Tim Griffing ’74 played in the era when Maine had just five high school hockey teams. Sid Pols, BHS ’23, the event videographer, told of winning a State Championship with the Dragons in 2022 and recounted Brunswick’s epic five overtime playoff win over the Cheverus/Yarmouth co-op that season.

Chelsea Bickford, Six RIvers’ project manager, is a second generation ice warrior with dual interests. In the late 70s when Maine High School Boys hockey expanded from five to eight teams her father hit the ice with the first Mt. Ararat varsity squad. Chelsea laced them up herself in high school using the skills she learned at the Skating Club of Brunswick to patrol the blue line for the Yarmouth Clippers Womens’ hockey team. But as a veteran figure skater and teacher whose mother led the Brunswick Skating Club for years, what she really misses is the Gala Shows every March.

Like a local Ice Capades these shows had it all and signaled the final event on Bowdoin’s ice every spring; there were sequins, costumes, skits, line routines but also real opportunities for local figure skaters to perform at a high level in spot lit glory for an adoring audience..

Everyone had a coldest rink story.

Everyone had a story about getting on the ice before school at 4:30 AM.

Everyone agreed that the region needs another indoor ice skating facility and that efforts like the Zamboni Pull fundraiser are vital to raise the rink..

The Zamboni Pull



Brunswick’s Hockey Moms, tired of driving all winter for practices, came equipped with work gloves to give the Zamboni a pull for their teams. The course had gotten smooth and fast by the end of the afternoon but the hockey Moms pulled first. Even with a Zamboni full of water and the course frozen and bumpy, the Moms got it done.

Sixteen teams braved classic stick season raw weather to lend helping hands to haul a seven ton Zamboni the length of a forty foot course adjacent to Six Rivers Youth Sports indoor turf field just off Route 201 in Topsham.

Their cause? Raise $400,000 before the end of the year to unlock a $400,000 matching grant so Six Rivers Youth Sports can move forward with plans to add an indoor, fully refrigerated, NHL sized ice arena to the lot. Familiar to many as the former sites of Roller World and “The Dome,” Six Rivers recently doubled the acreage available for the project. As the location has been a destination for generations of young people, the spot is a cinch as the best place to add a new ice sheet to the local inventory.

The Bowdoin Men’s Ice Hockey team, whose home ice, the Sidney J. Watson Arena, is the only other local sheet, stepped up to put several teams into the Zamboni Pulling contest but plenty of other luminaries put teams in as well. Like most good fundraisers, this was as much about Fun as Funds. Costumes and team apparel was de rigueur. “It was gratifying to all the volunteers at Six Rivers Youth Sports to see so many people turn out and pull together with excitement for the new rink,” said Bill Patterson, the longtime President of the non-profit’s board.

Being first on the course hampered the Brunswick Hockey Moms. The Moms were hamstrung by the fact that the Zamboni’s snow tank was still filled to the brim with water. Sloshing over many heats lightened its load so the boys from Bowdoin had it easy by their turn on the course. But hard work didn’t challenge these women; they’ve been putting in the miles for their skaters for years.

Nothing shows esprit de corps like Jorts. Izzy’s Fan Club got it done in the costume department.



Why does the region need a new ice arena? After-all Bowdoin’s state of the art Watson Arena is home to Brunswick 2022 State Champion Boys Hockey team, the State’s only public school with a stand alone girls team in the Brunswick Dragons, two teams from Mt. Ararat, and legions of youth hockey players and figure skaters throughout the community.

That is just the point. Things have changed since Bowdoin built its first indoor rink in 1956. The demands on ice time at the college have changed with the growth of women’s hockey at all levels and increased regionalization of high school sports.. The four high school teams from Mt. Ararat and Brunswick now represent six or eight different schools from Lisbon to Wiscasset, across to Freeport, and every town in between.

The twin sheets of Auburn’s Norway Savings Bank Arena have long been a second home for the area’s youth skaters but consider the 11 year-old skater sitting in a car with her parents, driving from somewhere on Orr’s Island to Auburn for hockey practice on a weekday night. She’s eating dinner on the fly in the car, and hitting the ice at 7 PM. After an hour of drills she will be lucky to be home for bed at 9 p.m. Meanwhile her mom is watching the snow falling, wondering what Rte. 196 will look like on the way home.

Led by Coach Ben Guite atop the Zamboni, the Bowdoin Men’s Ice Hockey team put several teams in the Zambini pull contest braving sleet and occasional snow to help raise some funds and awareness. The college has always been generous with the ice time but their first priority is their own students so there is simply not enough local ice available to fill the local demand..

It’s not just about youth youth hockey or high school hockey. The new rink will provide recreation for the area’s adult leagues, figure skaters, curling leagues, and recreational skaters. Even now, the turf field is an asset to the community providing off season indoor practice facilities for the local field hockey, lacrosse, and soccer players.

The Skating Club of Brunswick, for the time being constrained to giving lessons at one end of the ice while their recreational skating occupies the remainder of the sheet, will once again have the time and space to pull off its annual show and provide more competitive outlets for its talented skaters.


A 2016 estimate by Midcoast Youth Hockey found that a child spends a minimum of 66 hours in the car over the course of a season, to get 44 hours of practice time. Even carpooling with three players a car, the Midcoast Youth Hockey Association was driving roughly 62,000 miles a year to make sure its skaters got their ice time. No doubt the same is true for the region’s figure skaters.

So the Moms know driving and they know Zambonis. They also know a good time. While they came out clad in hockey jerseys representing the local squads, plenty of the other teams put on their best threads to celebrate the occasion. The unofficial best costume contest was a toss-up. On the one hand was Izzy’s Fab Club with their ugly seasonal sweaters and classic denim jorts. On the other was the Morning Wake-Up Hockey Club complete with Stove Pipe hats and a human sized rabbit mascot.

Pizzas, beer, and treats were provided by The Osprey, Moderation Brewing, and The Pejepscot.

All together this event raised $10,950 which together with the December match totals out to just shy of $22,000.

The existing indoor turf facility and fitness facility is at left in what was once the Roller World facility on Atwood Lane just off Route 201 in Topsham. Pictured at right is the proposed new indoor, fully refrigerated, NHL sized arena. Visit Six Rivers Youth Sports

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In Brunswick, Hockey, Maine, Maine Sports, Sports Photography, Fund Raising, Six Rivers Youth Sports, Maine Hockey Tags Maine Sports, Hockey, Six Rivers Youth Sports, Dale Arnold, WCME, Fund Raising, Raise the Rink, Brunswick Dragons, Mt. Ararat Eagles, Bowdoin College, Midcoast Youth Hockey, Skating Club of Brunswick

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    • Feb 3, 2024 Photographing Phototropism: embracing the optimism of a single yellow birch. Feb 3, 2024
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    • Jan 5, 2024 Famed Broadcaster Dale Arnold Visits Six Rivers Youth Sports to Help Raise The Rink! Jan 5, 2024
  • December 2023
    • Dec 30, 2023 Saying Good-bye Dec 30, 2023
    • Dec 16, 2023 Raise the Rink! Hockey Moms and the Rest of the Skating Community Come Together to Have Some Fun and Build a New Rink in Topsham. Dec 16, 2023
    • Dec 1, 2023 We Belong to the Rock. Dec 1, 2023
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    • Nov 17, 2023 Getting In Touch With My Inner John McKee Nov 17, 2023
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    • Jul 28, 2023 Get The Light While You Can Jul 28, 2023
    • Jul 14, 2023 Brunswick's Folk Orange Debuts EP Jul 14, 2023
    • Jul 5, 2023 Golfing for Good, The Peter Gardner Scholarship. The Brunswick, Maine High Class of 1980 sets out to endow their third perpetual scholarship with the Brunswick Area Student Aid Fund. Jul 5, 2023
  • June 2023
    • Jun 23, 2023 The Sportswriter Jun 23, 2023
  • April 2023
    • Apr 2, 2023 Grant Wood Was a Drone Pilot Apr 2, 2023
  • March 2023
    • Mar 30, 2023 The Best Picture I Never Took: Missing the Hero Shot. Mar 30, 2023
  • December 2022
    • Dec 26, 2022 Laura E. Richards's House, Lost to a Christmas Fire Dec 26, 2022
  • October 2022
    • Oct 22, 2022 What a Way to Go: A Scholar's Death Oct 22, 2022
  • September 2022
    • Sep 12, 2022 A Full Moon, and Football, Return to Brunswick High School Sep 12, 2022
  • June 2022
    • Jun 19, 2022 I buy it if I like the album cover. Jun 19, 2022
  • February 2022
    • Feb 27, 2022 Who Owned This Book? And, Have You Seen "Topper" Lately? Feb 27, 2022
  • December 2021
    • Dec 31, 2021 The Back-Checker Dec 31, 2021
    • Dec 22, 2021 Hey Catherine Maria Sedgwick, What's Your Pub Date? Dec 22, 2021
    • Dec 13, 2021 Pull Up In Black And Orange And Get Rowdy Dec 13, 2021
  • November 2021
    • Nov 24, 2021 The Tree in Mr. Hubbard's Yard Nov 24, 2021
    • Nov 16, 2021 A Couple of Old Friends Nov 16, 2021
  • October 2021
    • Oct 30, 2021 Down by the River, I Shot My Camera Oct 30, 2021
  • September 2021
    • Sep 8, 2021 f/64. I wish. Focus stacking in pursuit of legendary detail. Sep 8, 2021
  • January 2021
    • Jan 24, 2021 A Favorite View Jan 24, 2021
  • December 2020
    • Dec 16, 2020 On Its Way Home, Samuel Parker's Exploring Tour Beyond the Rockies. Dec 16, 2020
  • August 2020
    • Aug 29, 2020 We Walked Because We Had To Aug 29, 2020
    • Aug 24, 2020 Old Books With Maps, Always a Welcome Trip Down the Rabbit Hole. Aug 24, 2020
  • July 2020
    • Jul 11, 2020 You Want to be Where Everybody Knows Your Name (Or Do You?) Jul 11, 2020
  • May 2020
    • May 16, 2020 This Year, Go Ahead And Buy That Teacher Gift May 16, 2020
  • April 2020
    • Apr 13, 2020 Learning To Judge A Book By Its Cover Apr 13, 2020
  • February 2020
    • Feb 8, 2020 Kate Douglas Wiggin. A Face of Brunswick in 1904 and the first President of the Bowdoin Society of Women Feb 8, 2020
  • January 2020
    • Jan 26, 2020 A Chop Shop For Old Art Books? Jan 26, 2020
  • December 2019
    • Dec 27, 2019 Harriet Beecher Stowe, A Face of Brunswick since 1850. First editions, her imitators, detractors, and their work. Dec 27, 2019
    • Dec 4, 2019 Not What I Wanted: My Diane Arbus Phase Dec 4, 2019
  • November 2019
    • Nov 6, 2019 In October's endless brightness Nov 6, 2019
  • September 2019
    • Sep 15, 2019 Where is Elm Island, Mr. Kellogg? Sep 15, 2019
  • August 2019
    • Aug 20, 2019 A Rabbit Hole Filled With Books Aug 20, 2019
    • Aug 8, 2019 It's No Drive-In Movie, But The Price is Right Aug 8, 2019
  • February 2019
    • Feb 22, 2019 1344 Pounds of Granite Feb 22, 2019
  • November 2018
    • Nov 23, 2018 Light the tree with Brunswick High's talented singers. How did they get so good? Nov 23, 2018
    • Nov 3, 2018 Welcome Home Lily Nov 3, 2018
  • October 2018
    • Oct 29, 2018 Maine's Most Complete Coverage of the State Cross-Country Championships . Oct 29, 2018
  • September 2018
    • Sep 26, 2018 Learning a New Sport, Part II: At least there is no offsides. Sep 26, 2018
    • Sep 3, 2018 Learning a New Sport Sep 3, 2018
  • August 2018
    • Aug 28, 2018 They Don't Build Them Like This Anymore Aug 28, 2018
    • Aug 26, 2018 Bridge Stories: A VW Beetle named Gregor? Aug 26, 2018
    • Aug 22, 2018 Not What I Wanted Aug 22, 2018
    • Aug 21, 2018 On The Road From Belfast: A Conversion Story Aug 21, 2018
  • July 2018
    • Jul 22, 2018 The Fruits of Her Labor: How to Brand a Job. Jul 22, 2018
    • Jul 17, 2018 Drive-by shooting Jul 17, 2018
    • Jul 13, 2018 Joy gives way to empathy. Jul 13, 2018
    • Jul 8, 2018 Finding the vantage point. Jul 8, 2018

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