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  • Building A Better Truck To Haul Maine Potatoes To Market.

    Curosity, What Makes Something Work.
    What Is That, What Do You Have There?

    If you worked at an over the road big truck company, building a better vehicle that sold more units would be the goal.

    To get that better truck designed, built you had best be very curious. Asking the truck drivers who live in those 18 wheelers what they like.

    What they don’t.

    About the rig they drive, that others use. And learn what they have experienced or heard at truck stops about the pros and cons of all flavors. 10-4?

    Even if you had engineers from the best college schools in the land back east working for you, have to still tap in to the guy or gal behind the wheel racking up those millons of miles. Those truck drivers with the chain drive wallets are the real research and development crew. They live in that home away from home on wheels for weeks, years at a time.

    My dad was a Maine potato farmer for twenty four years. In addition to growing spuds, he was a broker for them.

    Buying Maine potato loads to get to the Boston, Hartford, New York produce markets for the most part.

    He had ICC comodity rights for hauling back loads of paper products. Usually the back haul was a load of french fry cartons.

    My brother Brian, other brothers and myself would take truck trips. We had fun going to the big city, riding shot gun in the cab overs my Dad bought. Helping the truck drivers unload. Having a bag of potatoes left over to trade for fresh off the Florida tree grapefruits or oranges.

    The first trailer truck bought after the Maine railroad started loosing loads to over night efficiency was a 1963 White cab over 250 Cummins diesel single screw with a tag axle.

    And the first trailer a Fruehauf 1957 box. My parents eventually had eight trucks parked out behind our Maine farm barn that became a truck terminal.

    Have two brothers that ended up engineers. But the mechanical one was my Brother Brian. He would designed truck after truck in his bedroom. Dad and Mom had a desk built just for drafting. Brian drews cars too. Very detailed, very well.

    He worked his way up through the ranks of Freightliner and married a lady from Portland Oregon. And when he became plant manager, he also had experience with designing a new series.

    To get the best Freightliner built, he sent the engineers who thought they could design anything out on the highway with coast to coast truckers.

    To take off their white shirt and tie and live like, think like a trucker.

    Those engineers designing the new series truck came back with tons of information. Complaints from some drivers of older models that their back and kidneys hurt due to the seat suspension. Others complained how hard it was to change a truck electrical fuse. Or reach way over to change a station on the radio without nearly a jack knife accident happening.

    But also a long list of what the drivers liked about their current truck were gleaned, gathered and factored in to the design of the new class eight truck line. The engineering is key. But the guys and gals working on this module, that system have to communicate too. The truck does not just go together the most efficient, ergonomic way without study, timing, discussion.

    I’m am glad my parents ran lots of businesses and exposed the four boys to many endeavors.

    It was not just a childhood of one type of living or career and we all became more well rounded because of it.

    One brother went in to truck design because Dad and Mom had Whites, International Transtar and a Peterbilt.

    Another went in to civil engineering because of my parents building a new centralize packing potato shed.

    I got exposed to Maine real estate due to my parents working in that and the property appraisal field.

    I was lucky to have hard working, creative parents that exposed us to a very education childhood in Maine.

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

  • The Maine Maple Tree, 75 Feet Of Rope, A Bike With Training Wheels.

    Not A Premeditated Maine Farm Bike Accident
    Houlton Maine Courthouse During Snowstorm

    The long driveways at the Maine farm I grew up on are lined with large mature maple trees.

    The buildings are set off the road. And one day as a very young boy growing up on that Maine farm I may have lamented that my bike with the training wheels was too slow. Watching my three older brothers ride large bikes very fast around those three driveways had caused the whine to be uttered. Made public.

    So one brother decided let’s help the little guy out, with a long rope. Hooked to my handlebars and the seat of the bike he was riding. The intial bike launch went very well. My feet could not keep up with the speed and I just hung on for the driveway down hill staight away. But as my brother suddenly remembered, thought of busy US Rt 2 at the end of the driveway, quick thinking was needed. All those cars, trucks, oncoming traffic made him decide to swerve. Across the lawn, between those large maple shade trees. Rope in tow mode, engaged, fully operational.

    His bike made the safe passage across the Maine farm front lawn.

    But that long 75 long rope caused quite an angle of entry between those large maple trees for my little bike on the tether.

    I tractor beamed right in to a maple, causing both bikes to cease to be in motion. My brother the bike pilot on the other end fetched up, rope tight then suddenly slack as his bike stopped. He topple off over his bike handlebars. The speedometer recording “0” for speed as the dust settled.

    My bike got pretty twisted, tangled up, embedded in that farm maple. My face a wall of blood as I got a straight on up close and personal look at that large fixed positioned Maine farm rock maple tree. Mom was summoned. Brought in to the post bike acceleration exercise mayhem. Then I was wisked to my grandmother the nurse trained professional a half mile away on another Maine potato farm. To be tended, cleaned up, made bike riding worthy again. What does not kill you makes you stronger right? An oh scar? Oh sure. Look under my chin for the big cut, skin tear that should have had stitches from that bike land speed record accident. Ah, childhood memories on a Maine farm.

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

  • Ultralight In Maine, No, Not Talking A Skinnier You, ME.

    The Houlton Maine KHUL Airport Was Very Valuable In World War Two.

    Ever been for a ultra light air plane ride? You might think no one is getting me up in a small aluminum tubular toy airplane with some canvas stitched on the wings and powered by a Rotax air cooled snowsled engine.

    But you calm down a little when you learn the safety is there. With an easy ultralight plane glide path safety margin, an experienced FAA licensed pilot beside you that wants to walk on land again too.

    A local Houlton Maine pilot Gene Ross is in the sky spring, summer and fall over the Southern Aroostook County area.

    Slowly buzzing over a little league baseball game, the fourth of July celebration or just drifting by during a sunny weekend afternoon as you putter in your back yard.

    My youngest son Elliot bid on a Houlton Maine Rotary Auction ultralight plane ride and won it. And when I took him out to meet Gene and get strapped in, I quickly realized the pilot has safety first in mind always. After the ride, Gene asked me if I wanted to go up. You bet. What an experience.

    Climbing slowly but not needing much of Houlton Maine International Airport runway for take off with a plane this small, and well, ultra light. Having to be back on pavement with the plane before sunset. The ultra light built with safety marker navigation lights. And pilot Gene Ross keying the microphone to fire up the KHUL landing strip marker beacons remotely. You do not feel inside a glass and fiberglass bubble with an ultra light plane ride. You are right out in the open. No obstacles in your way to enjoy the view, vista. It’s a quick up and down process at a small Houlton Maine rural airport setting.


    View Larger Map

    Took some neat aerial images of Houlton Maine like this one that I use in our blog posts, day to day real estate job too. The Houlton Maine community looks so much different from the air.

    If you have a chance to be asked want an ultralight plane ride in Maine, anywhere on the revolving blue and green marble, put your right thumb up quickly.

    Take the ultralight plane flight. Ride shot gun in to the wild blue yonder for the experience. Without worrying about is your term life insurance policy paid up or not.

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

  • Up At 5Am And The Maine Farm Cows Waiting.

    Till, Plant, Cultivate And Harvest Using Maine Farm Soil.
    Maine Farms, Wide Open Beautiful And Low Cost.

    Sliding out of bed, throwing on some barn clothes and heading out to feed, water the Maine farm animals.

    Early morning is the best time of day, unless you stayed up too late the night before. The Maine farm critters needing grain, hay and some fresh water because they drink but don’t drive a lot. Thirsty from walking around the farm fields, up and down hill and dale.

    Ever thought of owning your little spread of land, a patch of dirt, some wooded sections in Maine? To have an old Maine farm house. Or to purchase Maine land, a parcel of property and build your own buildings one by one? It’s not crazy.

    At one time not long ago, 96% of us in this great country were farmers.

    Not much money but well fed, exercised and pretty crafty at many trades. Master of none. But still a real Jack willing to roll up your sleeves and try your hand at carpentry, plumbing, electrical, welding or whatever the need was on a Maine farm. Like keeping that old tractor running, plowing and tilling up the fertile soil.

    I am sure glad I was raised on a Maine farm. It made me closer to my parents who worked side by side. I got to know them better. Was taught more from them in lessons learned day in and out. Because they were not off at an office building many miles away. But all of us on the Maine farm. Working to maintain buildings, plant and havest crops. Whatever it took to stay on that Maine farm.

    Farmers markets in Maine on the increase as folks want close to home, fresh produce. That is not genetically altered, not gassed with poisons to make it last the long haul from wherever it came from to be placed on the family dinner table.

    Let’s talk about owning some Maine land, maybe a farm with your name on the title deed.

    Or if you want us to leave you alone, just be able to browse with out any pesky real estate salesperson, agent or broker bother you, wander over in to the Maine farms video aisle. Watch, listen and then ask lots of questions about this new lifestyle you are considering on a Maine farm. I think it is a great idea.

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

  • Memorial Day, Official Start Of Summer Maine Waterfront Property Living.

    Taking A Break On A Maine Lake.
    Fun Under The Sun, On The Maine Waterfront.

    If you are lucky enough to be on the water, own something next to a Maine lake, stream, river, ocean, this Memorial Day weekend will be a busy one.

    If you live outside of Maine, there is no doubt a hurry scurry to get packed, head to the waterfront property. To get the camp or cottage opened up for family and friends with fingers crossed. Hoping for sunshine and warm weather with a slight breeze dialed in for good measure. To enhance that Maine summer holiday. Planning to grill something that goes well with home made potato salad, fresh Maine blueberry, strawberry rhubbarb pie. Or steaming a Maine lobster, peck of clams with a garden fresh salad.

    Leisure, vacation time or maybe retirement at this Maine waterfront property is part of a balanced life. Work that satisfies, brings in the bread, pays the bills is all well and good. But time to sit in a deck chair and stare.

    Out over the Maine waterfront, where the loons sing and entertain.

    Fish jump, tease. Ducks quack quack paddle by. Where no two sunsets or sunrises are the same as you reflect. Enjoy a coffee or cold drink. Life, how is yours going and stepping outside of it for a long Maine summer weekend is healthy. You think of your parents doing the same holiday when you were a kid. How your kids will repeat what you show them with those grand kids.

    Holidays, not just Christmas or New Years with presents, eating too much and staying up too late to mess up your regular routine. Family and friends need to have you available and what better back drop then a Maine waterfront property to help you with the transition of being a Little Red Hen efficient to throw on some shorts, a t shirt and consider going kayaking, fishing, swimming. Warning, a Maine waterfront property is another place to take care of. But the puttering, work involved can be rewarding.

    Fires nightly, the sunlight causing a million diamond shape bright sparkles of flickering light off the water are just what the doctor ordered. Relax, have a seat, get off the treadmill and fill your lungs with Maine fresh air.

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

  • Fiddleheads Along Maine Rivers, Streams, Brooks.

    Maine Has Lots Of Wild, Fresh Native Food Besides Blueberries, Lobsters, Potatoes.
    Fiddleheads, Many Eat Them Steamed, With Vinegar Added To The Greens.

    If you are from Maine you know what a fiddlehead is.

    Not confusing it with the business end of a musical instrument but knowing it is a delicacy. Only around in the early spring in Maine when the green lush vegetation returns.

    Some folks like to pick the green by the bushels to resell. Others buy their fiddleheads, all cleaned and fresh.

    Maybe using vinegar on this vegetable Maine is famous for.

    I see cans of Maine fiddleheads on grocery store shelves from a packer, canner in Lewiston Maine. Learn more about Maine fiddleheads.Fiddleheads, another food of Maine besides blueberries, lobsters, clams and potatoes. Have you ever had them? Come try them, one more reason to come to Maine.

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