by David Brooks | May 14, 2018 | Blog, Newsletter
Bicycles aren’t really geeky – unless they’re electric, autonomous, GPS-enabled and/or use a hydrogen fuel cell, of course – but there’s something so steampunky about those gears and chains that I think it’s reasonable for me to...
by David Brooks | May 14, 2018 | Blog, Newsletter
From UNH News Service: Scientists with the New Hampshire Agricultural Experiment Station at the University of New Hampshire have developed a method to estimate the abundance of New England cottontail populations. The noninvasive method provides an important tool in...
by David Brooks | May 9, 2018 | Blog, Newsletter
New Hampshire, of course, is home to the first and probably most famous case of alien abduction – Betty and Barney Hill’s tale of being taken up into a spaceship near Franconia Notch back in 1961. We’ve got an official monument for the event, and...
by David Brooks | May 9, 2018 | Blog, Newsletter
This might be a one-time event, but it’s still an indication of how things are changing in the power system. ISO-New England says that on April 21, mild weather and high solar output depressed daytime loads below those in the middle of the night for the first...
by David Brooks | May 9, 2018 | Blog, Newsletter
Utility support for electric vehicles in New Hampshire continues to inch forward with the announcement of a $3,000 rebate for Eversource customers if they buy a new Nissan Leaf, the biggest such incentive offered through a state power company. The payment will be made...
by David Brooks | May 9, 2018 | Blog, Newsletter
Most invasive species, alas, are not edible. For example, not even goats and sheep will eat the black swallow-wort that is trying to take over my property, a pernicious tangling vine that I’ve been fighting for 20 years. But green crabs – an...