Noah Adams http://wmub.org en Michigan Apple Orchards Blossom After A Devastating Year http://wmub.org/post/michigan-apple-orchards-blossom-after-devastating-year Last year, almost the entire Michigan apple crop was lost because of 80-degree days in March and then some freezing April nights. This year, the apples are back, but everything always depends on the weather. Tue, 14 May 2013 07:27:00 +0000 Noah Adams 12528 at http://wmub.org Michigan Apple Orchards Blossom After A Devastating Year Struggling W.Va. Town Hopes Boy Scout Camp Brings New Life http://wmub.org/post/struggling-wva-town-hopes-boy-scout-camp-brings-new-life Picture a tiny town set along a creek in West Virginia. A mountain rises from the town's eastern edge, overlooking the 1,400 people living below. Then, July comes — and 50,000 people arrive on that mountain for the National Scout Jamboree.<p>The town is called Mount Hope. I've heard some call it "Mount Hopeless." The town went through the long, downward slump from the boom days of deep-mine coal, when it was a grand, small-town capital of coal mining.<p>Now it's crumbling, struggling, but recently hopeful, because there's a veritable pot of gold on top of that nearby mountain. Mon, 08 Apr 2013 19:55:00 +0000 Noah Adams 11199 at http://wmub.org Struggling W.Va. Town Hopes Boy Scout Camp Brings New Life Steamship Anchors A Community, But Its Days May Be Numbered http://wmub.org/post/steamship-anchors-community-its-days-may-be-numbered On the shores of Lake Michigan, the tiny town of Ludington, Mich., is home port to the last coal-fired ferry in the U.S. The SS Badger has been making trips across the lake to Manitowoc, Wis., during the good-weather months since 1953. And as it runs, the 411-foot ferry discharges coal ash slurry directly into the lake.<p>An Environmental Protection Agency permit allows the Badger to dump four tons of ash into the lake daily. Mon, 04 Mar 2013 22:17:00 +0000 Noah Adams 9904 at http://wmub.org Steamship Anchors A Community, But Its Days May Be Numbered In Kentucky's Coal Country, A Resentment For Obama http://wmub.org/post/kentuckys-coal-country-resentment-obama If the voters in Louisa, Ky., had their wish, Mitt Romney would have taken the oath of office Monday. Louisa is in eastern Kentucky, and "coal" was the one-word issue in the election. President Obama is seen as an enemy of coal mining and he got only 27 percent of the vote in the county.<p>And now comes word that Louisa is going to lose its biggest industry — a power generating plant that's been burning coal since 1962.<p>Stand outside the courthouse in Louisa, a small town of 2,000 people, and you'll see that it's easy to meet a coal miner. Mitchell Maynard is a third-generation miner. Mon, 21 Jan 2013 22:13:00 +0000 Noah Adams 8284 at http://wmub.org In Kentucky's Coal Country, A Resentment For Obama Shriveled Mich. Apple Harvest Means Fewer Jobs, Tough Year Ahead http://wmub.org/post/shriveled-mich-apple-harvest-means-fewer-jobs-tough-year-ahead An apple a day might keep the doctor away, but what do you do when there are no apples? It's a question western Michigan's apple growers are dealing with this season after strange weather earlier in the year decimated the state's apple cultivation.<p>Michigan is the <a href="http://www.michiganapples.com/grow1.html">third-largest</a> apple producer in the U.S. after New York and Washington, but the state's apples will soon be in short supply. Mon, 17 Sep 2012 19:44:00 +0000 Noah Adams 4050 at http://wmub.org Shriveled Mich. Apple Harvest Means Fewer Jobs, Tough Year Ahead