The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  This Just In
WFNX_1000x50g

Home sweet home

Deering pond house delayed
By TONY GIAMPETRUZZI  |  June 28, 2006

Like the fragrance of lilacs, there is one sure sign that summer has come to Maine. That’s when the miniature bungalow-style house is placed in the pond at Deering Oaks Park to welcome all the fowl who inhabit the city during the summer months.

In fact, my Houston-reared friend Kristen accurately points out that it’s the removal of the house each October that lets you know “you’re fucked.”

But this year, both the weather and the absence of the house might have led me and others to believe that summer is not here — like the Farmer’s Almanac, no house is a harbinger that something must be amiss this year.

Come to find out, it’s not impending bad weather or a ban on birds that is holding things up but rather a broken fountain.

That’s right — you haven’t noticed that illuminated splendor of cascading water, either.

According to Portland Parks Division manager Phil Labbe, replacing the house each year requires draining the pond, and with the 50-year-old fountain out of commission, the big drain has been postponed.

“The problem is that we weren’t able to find the necessary replacement parts for the existing fountain, so we’ve put the project out to bid,” says Labbe, adding that the budget for the project is in the $120,000 range. Labbe, who returned from vacation this week, was unable to comment on the bidding process except to say that estimates for the repair have been coming in over budget.

He did say that to repair the fountain will likely take up to three weeks when a contractor is found to do the work and, until then, the house, now being held at an undisclosed location, will stay put. One reason is that the fountain actually provides a certain amount of water circulation, which assists in keeping the fowl’s foul from fouling up the entire park. That and to drain the pond twice would just be silly.

At this point, it’s uncertain, says Labbe, whether the house or the fountain will be operating this summer. And, thus, for some, 2006 will be the summer that never was.

| More

ARTICLES BY TONY GIAMPETRUZZI
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   JONATHAN LEE IS BACK HOME, CREATIVELY AND WITH HIS ACTIVISM  |  November 02, 2011
    When Jonathan Lee rose from the crowd at the Equality Maine Awards banquet last March to pledge $5000 to the pro-gay marriage effort, it's likely that many people in the room turned their heads in curiosity.
  •   STAPH INFECTION — THE FULL STORY  |  January 23, 2008
    That’s right, a rare bug that threatened to eat away at gay guys like mice on cheese is rampant in the city closest to Portland.
  •   T-SHIRT TRENDSETTERS’ HOLIDAY SALE  |  December 12, 2007
    Maine’s very own little taste of couture, Rogues Gallery, will have another of its wildly popular sample sales on Saturday at SPACE Gallery.
  •   GAY AND LESBIAN COUPLES MOVE ONE STEP CLOSER TO MARRIAGE  |  September 05, 2007
    Maine’s highest court made a high-road decision last week by unanimously ruling that same-sex couples can legally adopt children in Maine.
  •   PIER PRESSURE  |  August 08, 2007
    When you go to Old Orchard Beach and ask Barbra Womack where she’s from, she says “down the street.”

 See all articles by: TONY GIAMPETRUZZI



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group