Author: Andrew Mooers

  • Active Rain Blogger Andrew Mooers Hosts MeInMaine Blog.

    Moonlighting, extra jobs to round out the process of promoting Maine, getting the word out about the Pine Tree State, Vacationland up here in the right hand corner of the country.

    For years MeInMaine author yours truely has been a member of the Active Rain blog network. And if you follow the MeInMaine blog posts, you might enjoy a few of the posts on the AR platform.

    The Active Rain blog network is over 198,000 strong. In addition to real estate related topics covered in depth, many communities around the world are highlighted. Images, videos, helpful links and just information from local real estate related industry bloggers are posted hourly by many.

    Who better than a local, live eye in the sky at the scene of the community center to post about anything from schools, where to eat, health care and what to do for fun than a native of the village.

    I love where I live, what I do and writing about it is not hard. Our videos also show the area, community events in Maine. Please visit our new Maine real estate site too if you have some time.

    Thank you for following me on MeInMaine blog. Please check out the extensive Active Rain blog post.
    Flickr and Youtube platforms loaded with interesting Ma
    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers

    207.532.6573
    info@mooersrealty.com

  • Living Off Grid In Maine, Anywhere.

    Power Created By The Wind In Maine.
    Maine Wind Generation.

    You don’t get a monthly power utility bill when you live off grid in Maine.

    Your lifestyle changes in a good way and it is a decision, self inflicted choice these days. In Daniel Boone’s era or when Martha and George Washington sat down for dinner at the White house with candle light, it was not.

    Living off grid has many meanings, suggests many different images, designs on how to achieve it in a person’s head. Some folks gasp, flinch and are horrified to think of not just plugging in the curling iron, firing up the dryer to fluff up those towels.

    Others think better for the earth, less carbon and new ways to save money and get pretty much the same results. Independence from their old habit of power consumption. Now way more aware of what it costs, how to get it cheapest. Wind generation is big in Maine. On large and small scale. I have sold Maine land to folks that wanted to be on a dead end road without power as they thought of this lack of juice as a plus. But knowing others would consider it a negative.

    Less people around you means more space, less what did I do wrong now or have to stop in your opinion.

    Not anti-social, just enjoying your own company and not wanting to bother anyone else. And vice versa.

    Heating with wood since Maine is 91 percent forested is a given and requires no electricity.

    Little gas for the chainsaw to cut the trees, yard them out or maybe for a wood splitter.

    But there, got heat covered. Automatic heat like a gas wall unit makes it possible to zip down to visit family, shop out of town too.

    Southern orientation to capture the sunlight and heat is like having lights turned on in every room courtesy of the sun. Smaller watt flourescents use little energy that can be collected with solar panels, generator charging batteries on dark days, water wheels in brooks or rivers if riparian rights exist. Or a little Whisper class, type wind generator.

    Had a fellow that worked at the Houlton Maine post office who had several batteries in his car that charged on the way to and from work. In winter he could use the colder temperatures outside for food refrigeration. But told me in spring, summer, fall, he would stop at the market on the way home. Pick up whatever he needed for the family meal, combined with garden grown vegetables, fruits from the open land he cleared around his Maine log home.

    Raising beef, critters that you name and expect to slaughter to put on the table is hard though.

    Had two pigs growing up that Dad convinced the four boys that they were not the same ones we fed, chased around the barn and had been swapped.

    We would never have knowingly munched on, ate a friend, pet. No matter how hungry.

    More living off grid in Maine, anywhere resources if this lifestyle has you thinking about reducing overhead, living healthier, happier. Maine homesteading, living off the grid, being self sufficient is very doable. How do you think our earlier generations, relatives did it on the farm?

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers
    207.532.6573

  • Maine Christmas Is A Sense Of Community, Connection.

    Over the holidays in Maine open horse sleigh rides, singing
    Maine Christmas Holidays Brighter If You Pitch In To Help Others.
    Maine Homes, Nice And Warm And Filled With Holiday Spirit, Tradition.
    Christmas carols outside friends and neighbor homes and home made food deliveries happen.

    Christmas is family and traditions at home, in communities, at church or school. And very hard for anyone that lost a loved one, with anyone that is missing this holiday season.

    Had the neice of my secretary tell me this morning about the police department in Windham Maine. A friend of her’s that was killed in a drunk driver car wreck with two kids in the car was shocking, horrible news around the holidays a few years back. And the mother’s birthday was a week away from her death. The two kids in the car lived, are okay. Different dads and one went to live with an aunt in Portland, the other with a dad in Bangor.

    And when the Windham Maine police department reported to the scene of the accident, they discovered a Christmas shopping list in the mother’s pocket book, purse. The police department divided up the list and bought all the items on it for those two kids and everyone else on that list. Making the deliveries, all without fan fare. Maine people are like that. Doing the right thing, rising to the occasion to make an awful tragedy, situation better in any small way.

    Not for attention, not a publicity stunt and all done behind the scenes needing no recognition. That is Christmas to me, helping others that are hurting, needy, struggling with life’s ups and downs. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year From MeInMaine Blog. And please follow our sister blog posts on Active Rain.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers
    207.532.6573

  • Maine Blog Posts, Other Interesting News From Vacationland.

    Happy Wildlife In Maine, Getting Along.
    Big Maine Moose, Little Domestic Kitty Cat, But Both Respect Each Other, Get Along.

    The MeInMaine Blog posts try to hit on the nooks, crannies, neat people and places in the Pine Tree State, Vacationland.

    Like this blog post on living off grid in Maine on a private island. Maine is a four season area with self sufficiency, free thinking and hard work the fiber of the fewer but friendlier people who live here. Much of the simpler living traces back to farm roots, working in the woods considering the state is 91% forested, dotted with trees, timber. Fishing off the coast of Maine in harsh weather, rolling seas helps define what a person who lives up here in the right hand corner of the world is made of, all about.

    There are Maine blog posts on colleges, universities too. I spied a workshop on media, photography, film in Maine and thought maybe that would be fun to fit in, sit through, attend. Often the blog posts in Maine are discovered surfing myself for something on line and thinking hey, that is an event that should be broadcast, passed along. That I would enjoy.

    A lot of the blog posts MeInMaine produces are seeking to find out more about a topic and what the research comes up with, provides. Like National Geographic’s feature blog post on eating well in Portland Maine. Food, local Maine food vegetables, produce home grown, raised here also featured because it is wholesome, fresh, raised by friends and neighbors. Or news about pirates in Maine, invading a place called Market Square.

    Or maybe the travels, wandering give us a bus ride to a home schooling Maine blog post with some kinda of delicious looking blueberry images that got my attention. Or cross pollenation with sister Maine blogging platform on Active Rain where there are approaching 1700 posts on everything under the sun.

    It is fun to blog Maine posts and see how something on the national level can have a local approach, copy with a salt and pepper simple seasoning of images.

    Maine images say a thousand words. Media types are so plentiful to show and tell Maine to anyone on line holding a droid, balancing a lap top, sitting in front of a computor monitor with visual elements, not just a flow of electrons making words to follow.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers
    207.532.6573
    info@mooersrealty.com.

  • Heated Maine House With Wood For Years…

    Winter Outdoor Recreation Is Fun If You Are Dressed Warmly.
    Help For Low Income Maine Households With Heating Assistance Of Average $553 This Year.

    The trips to the Maine family woodlot to collect the winter’s fuel source was a fall tradition.

    Loading up a farm truck with five to six cords of woods was a habit many had in Maine when the price of heating oil soared. Lots of work to heat with wood from cutting trees, sawing up to the length of your furnace or kitchen end heater. And transportation, unloading, restacking in the cellar.

    But good feeling like a squirrel that had his nuts, food stored for the winter.

    “All set” feeling of ready for winter.

    This year in Maine low income households can expect an average of $553 in heating fuel assistance. Maine Housing director Dale McCormack says 64,000 households expected to receive heating help. It comes thru the federal government’s Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program. Or when the mouth full shortened, LIHEAP.

    This year’s Maine heating assistance is below last winter’s average helping hand payout of $884 per eligible household. In Maine this winter, 28 million dollars in LIHEAP funds are budgeted for winter heating for the low income households scattered around Vacationland. Combining other Maine state funding, a total of 32 million dollars is available for low income Maine household heating assistance to help take the chill out of the winter air.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers
    207.532.6573
    info@mooersrealty.com

  • Maine Tree Growth Tax Law…How Does It Work?

    Maine Woodlots Can Have Lower Property Tax Bills With The Tree Growth Program Enrollment
    Maine, Picnics, Outdoors In The Woods, Wildlife, Less People, Simple Living.

    You have a woodlot in Maine, land that has timber growing on it like tree farming.

    But not the Christmas tree kind of farming where small seedlings are planted one thousand or twelve fifty to the acre in grid fashion by man.

    We talking at least ten acres of land to qualify for the Maine tree growth tax law program with mixed species, whatever the wood lot condition, age, condition from past timber cuts.

    A Maine forestry growth management forestry plan is drawn up by a licensed forester. Before you put the land in to the tree growth program, to lower your property taxes significantly, remember that it is a long time program. And to remove it from that program represents severe penalties in paying back the state of Maine subsidy in the tax reduction for your Maine woodlot. Maine Tree growth rates are established by the state tax assessors, county by county.

    Maine tree growth tax law, the program is a tax reducer but remember pulling the woodlot you own out will be costly in the wallet. And it is a good idea to except and reserve an acre out of that tree growth program in Maine. So if you want to build, that acre spot, the land for the house, camp will not trigger any penalties to reinmburse the state of Maine thru the muncipality where the property is located. Maine, get here quick as you can, own some.

    I’m Maine REALTOR, Broker Andrew Mooers
    207.532.6573
    info@mooersrealty.com.