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  • You Meet Someone Who’s Never Been To Maine.. Describe The Place.

    You Meet Someone Who’s Never Been To Maine.. Describe The Place.

    Cultures, Nationalities Make Maine Unique, Special, One Of A Kind.
    Cultures, Nationalities Make Maine Unique, Special, One Of A Kind.
    Mainers Know Who They Are, Where They Live And Feel Like The Luckiest, Blessed People On Earth. And They Are.
    Mainers Know Who They Are, Where They Live And Feel Like The Luckiest, Blessed People On Earth. And They Are.

    You’re on a game show, at a local diner out of state, filling your car with gas on a trip, and the question get raised..”Maine, what’s it like?”

    In this blog post to hit all the highlights is hard. But still as a Maine blogger proud of my state, and ready to toot the horn about it’s people and the way of life and four season outdoor beauty. Here goes anyway.

    One reason I have to make a stab at being in the “spotlight on Maine” is because so little about the state is out there on line or very accurate.

    If someone moves to the southern tip of Maine and is from the west coast. And suddenly  put on camera as a talking head for the place called Maine. More often than not, other than the coast, the rest of Maine is left out is the sound bite.

    Like Columbus felt when talk of the world being flat came up at card games, the local livery stable or on board a ship sailing to the unknown corners of the new world. Maine’s like that. Pretty much a secret.

    Maine for starters is one big state, and here is a quick ME geography, history, facts, figures house keeping run down from A-Z for up here in the right hand corner of the country.

    And for images, rather than worlds scope out this eyeball candy Maine photo, image site. Ok, Ok, Here is a splash on Maine lighthouses too. Happy? Maine is so much more than lobsters, lighthouses, blueberries and potatoes.

    Maine people are resilent, know who they are, don’t need life coaches or extensive couch therapy or mood elevators to enjoy life. Mainers are responsible, family oriented, friendly, neighborly, community proud with a ferocity. The outdoor four seasons of Maine is where the answers to life’s mysteries, complexities, pressures are found. The Maine forests, Baxter’s Mt Katahdin and 6000 lakes, rivers know the meaning of patience, time. We Mainers protect what God gave us to be good stewards with, to pass on to our kids.

    maine lake property
    Like To Kayak Or Want A Big Motor On Your Boat Or Jet Ski?

    Maine is coming to terms with lower wages, smaller population centers.

    But that makes us more resourceful, stronger volunteers, closer local citizens. Home grown, helping each other, more aware of the priorieties in life. No chip on our shoulder, or entitlement attitude or trying to short cut on any road to riches in Maine. Money to impress people? You won’t find that “look who I am attitude, what I have” attitude game played here. No pecking order, no steerage mentality of anyone being any better or worse than anyone else. We accept people, want the same done in return.

    It’s how we roll in Maine.

    grange hall maine home
    Grange Hall In Maine Repurposed Into A Home.

    Keep it simple, be helpful, make it real. Maine.

    We don’t la-de-da as the Van Morrison song croones. Who we are is who you see. Whether talking one on one playing horseshoes or cribbage or at a large municipal town hall, grange bean supper or at a sporting event.

    Jumper cables ready in the car or pickup and ready to stop, give you a hand. Make sure you are okay or need a lift somewhere, to call someone. To help you out. Mainer’s need each other but are self contained at the same time.

    This small town Houlton Maine Meduxnekeag Canoe race video shows you how we interact with mutual respect, courtesy, friendliness, a mixture of gratitude in this case that spring is here. That means getting out on the water, a Maine river. This year’s canoe kayak race by the way is May 1st, so spread the word will you?

    canoe river race in Maine
    Canoe River Race In Maine, Been Paddling Down One Of The Many River Races On The Circuit?
    amish farm homesteaders
    Growing Without Sprays, Chemicals. Organic Maine Homesteading Happens Around Maine!

    Or this Maine winter ski video shows you winter snow is not a dirty word.

    Evidence that we thrive on cobalt blue skies, carving down a hill under a bright sun gaining strength signaling that spring is approaching. So when someone asks “what’s Maine like?” if you can only use one word answers, you could do it. If you had lived for awhile to see how different it is from most places.

    To describe Maine one word at a time, I would pick “grateful”, “family”, “industrious,” “hardworking,” “resourceful,” “aware,” “outdoors,” “recreation,” “simple,” “grounded,” “clean,” “healthy,” “friendly”, “neighborly”,”unique.”

    barnacle billys
    Fish Fresh From The Maine Coastal Sea. Barnacle Billy’s Crew Ham It Up For Tourists.

    Anthony Bourdain’s No Reservation Season 6, Episode 12 television food/travel show covered Maine in broad brush fashion on a recent installment.

    But at least with the help of a Milo Maine camera man, Zach Zamboni for a local perspective. Scope out a Maine Bourdain show video clip. It is so refreshing to have more than the Maine coastal areas highlighted, “pressed” by someone as the local talking head who not even raised here. With no childhood, family, local community perspective to really draw from. No real history, or life long experience with this place, state of mind we call Maine.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers

    207.532.6573 | info@mooersrealty.com

    MOOERS REALTY 69 North ST Houlton ME 04730 USA

  • Maine State Jazz Show Choir Festival Music Competition In Houlton ME A Big Success!

    Not Just Singing, Expressing, Feeling The Music, Doing It With Dance.
    Not Just Singing, Expressing, Feeling The Music, Doing It With Dance As A Group.

    For the second year, Houlton Maine was the host town for 39 high school music programs competing in the Jazz Show Choir festival.

    Houlton Maine’s music director Joe Fagnant says it takes hundreds of workers and he has them in the local music boosters program, past students, parents, other teachers. Here is a video splash of just a taste of the event with schools performing from all over the state of Maine’s music programs on the middle and high school level.

    The talents of these Maine music programs and students is so great and the productions so tight, that I still find myself singing, humming songs on from the event.

    The singers, dancing so vibrant, full of energy that to have that kind of quality right in our own backyard is impressive, special, a source of Maine home town pride.

    Performing before a crowd, being part of group and learning the fine art of singing, dancing and competing helps shape the citizens of tomorrow. A group that will appreciate, fund and keep fine arts alive for the next generation of Mainers. Here is a recap of last year’s performance to that was just as electric, sharp, memorable. Roll the Maine music video Jimmy.

    Outdoor concerts will be starting soon at my home town’s amphitheatre. And the gift of music, the appearance of it in our every day life in Southern Aroostook County is evident in this McGill’s Band music performance video.

    We are lucky to live in Maine. Music is one more reason.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers

    207.532.6573

    info@mooersrealty.com

  • Houlton Maine Home To The Maine State Jazz Show Choir Music High School Competition.

    Nearly 40 Maine High Schools travel to Houlton Maine to take part in the annual state Jazz Festival this weekend, April 10th.

    The local Houlton Maine High School music weekend competition under the direction of band teacher Joe Fagnant and the Music Booster’s supporters are excited about being the state venue again for the many talented school performances.

    Here is a taste of last year’s performance. This video shows just a slice, segment of the Maine musical productions from my angle MC’ing groups in one part of Houlton High School while three other MC’s did the same one by one performances through out the day.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers

    207.532.6573

    info@mooersrealty.com

  • Maine Towns, Cities Would Not Be The Same With Out Rotary Clubs.

    The Boy With The Leaking Boot, Proud Ambassador To Friendly Houlton Maine
    The Boy With The Leaking Boot, Proud Ambassador To Friendly Houlton Maine

    The Houlton Maine Rotary Club is 90 years old.

    And like most Maine towns or cities lucky enough to have a hard working local civic minded Rotary Club, if suddenly there was not a wheel spoke of gold and blue spinning, the absence, loss would be felt in a major way. The Houlton Maine club is part of Rotary District 7810, which is unique. It’s a blend of both sides of the border. The US and Canadian clubs working together to do more as a strong unified group, rather than individuals struggling with duplication of efforts and no cohesive collective horse power to get projects completed to help the local areas they serve.

    Rotary means local business people, professionals that are busy but workers and the top of their job classifications. If you want something done, in my hometown of Houlton Maine, you need to just get Rotary behind it. Efforts to help youth are a particular fancy of the Rotary emphasis with use of funds and time, energies often directed to our greatest resource, the future generation. Here’s a list of just a few of the contributions made by the Houlton Maine Rotary Club.

    1921 Purchased Houlton Maine town band uniforms
    1922 Set up Junior Baseball League/Boys Work Committee (Ice Rink Care)
    1925 Funding started for education student scholarships
    1930 First Christmas auction for help local charitable causes
    1935 College education scholarship funds for Houlton High School
    1950 Raised funds for Ricker College, air shows, club jamborees
    1956 First Rotary Radio Auction, raised $8000 for Ricker College
    1970 Hospitals Madigan and Aroostook receive over $100,000
    1971 Restoration of the Houlton Maine Ambassador, Boy & The Boot
    1975 $40,000 Pool Fund started, used to build John Millar Ice Arena
    1976 First “Paul Harris Fellow” presented to Harold “Baldie” Inman
    (40 Paul Harris Fellows awarded in recognition of club members efforts)
    1977 Restore town clock bell system, take over local Ricker canoe races.
    1978 Get behind downtown Houlton Maine revitalization project
    1980 Raise, award more development funds for Houlton Regional Hospital
    1982 Wrap up three year capital fund raiser, needed hospital equipment
    1983 Houlton Maine tourist information display cabinet donated
    1985 375 SOLD $1000 pewter Boy & The Boot statues campaign starts
    1988 New welcome signs, downtown Houlton Maine beautification funding
    1989 Millar Ice Arena / multi purpose building improvements funded
    1991 Cary Library original building restoration, establish childrens library
    1992 Houlton Maine high school sound system funds raised, donated
    1993 Fund Southside School Reference Library
    1996 Houlton Amphitheater project, $55,000 raised for summer concerts
    1997/8 Complete HA project, memorial, yearly ceremonies, tributes here
    1999 Donate raised funds to Derby Hill, Soap Box Derby, USA largest race
    2000 Houlton Maine animal shelter construction funds raised, donated
    2001 Money raised for new high school curtains, gym floor, history video
    2002/4 Raised funds and construct Houlton outdoor skate park
    2005/6 Southern Aroostook Agricultural Museum auction sponsorship
    2007 Fund from auction for Houlton Community Arts Center
    2008 Fund new Houlton elementary school and park playgrounds
    2009 Fund Houlton Maine area little league, community arts center
    2010 Help fund new addition little league fields, minor hockey association
    Continue to raise funds from pewter $1000 Boy & The Boot sales, now raising money for new seating in the Community Arts Center and much more.

    The Houlton Maine Rotary Club meets Mondays at noon to enjoy always, always a delicious, hearty meal put on by the men and women of the Church of the Good Sheperd. The fellowship, a song, blessing on the meal served in Watson Hall of the Episcopal church on Main Street. We enjoy weekly speakers on a variety of subjects, fund youth group foreign exchange programs, and are working hard to like other Rotarians wipe the disease polio off the face of the earth. As a Rotarian where you live to take you to a weekly meeting.
    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers

    207.532.6573

    Email info@mooersrealty.com


  • Maine’s 6000 Lakes, Rivers, Streams Swell In Spring, Canoe – Kayak Races To Take Part In.

    Maine white water rafting, canoeing, kayaking..you don’t have to be a black belt racer to enjoy getting on the water.. a Maine lake, river, stream.

    Spring time means lots of races to signal high water and end of winter’s snow, the thaw creating lively waterways. The Kenduskeag Canoe Stream Bangor Maine Race is well know and televised on local news source. It’s Saturday, April 17th, 2010.

    Here’s the Meduxnekeag River Canoe Race 2009 Video. Small friendly and home grown canoe / kayak racing. Started back in the early 1970’s by Ricker College in Houlton Maine students. Carrying on the tradition were the members of the Houlton Maine Rotary club when Ricker closed its college doors after the Vietnam war end. This time of year you see more than one waterway on the to do list of avid outdoor paddlers too.

    Living in Maine means lots of recreation opportunities abound right in our backyard..literally. The only cost is sometimes a small entry fee to cover the cost of tshirts, trophies and to put on a feed for the in this case paddlers of kayaks, canoes that come together to celebrate spring coming to Maine. Maine, the way life should be. Wide open, unspoiled, fewer but way way friendlier people live here. Especially the further north you go in Maine.

    Leave you taser and hyper stressed life style behind in the urban concrete jungle where you keep your head down to avoid drive by shootings. Not like that in Maine.

    Where you are now you are tied, no actually chained to a desk for your 9-5 torture, I mean work day. It’s not like that in Maine. Get here for a part time or full time dose of Maine. You’re heart is already here. Help the rest of your major body parts get to “Vacationland”.
    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers
    207.532.6573Email info@mooersrealty.com

  • Maine Is Living Within Your Means, Being Careful With Money, Pay As You Go Thinking.

    Picking Maine Potatoes..Dusty, Hot Sun, Long Days But Part Of Growing Up.
    Picking Maine Potatoes..Dusty, Hot Sun, Long Days But Part Of Growing Up.
    Slow Dowh To Live The Good Life In Maine.
    Slow Dowh To Live The Good Life In Maine.

    Around Maine, most folks would consider spoiling a child the worse abuse you could lavish on your sons or daughters. Worse than neglect of that child.

    When money is in shorter supply, better impulse control with that money comes in to play. Kids watching a Maine mom and dad see how hard they work for what they have. How well they take care of, respect whatever they do purchase so they don’t have to run back out to spend more money. Spoiling a child and giving him or her undivided attention, unlimited resources and not insisting they have chores, odd jobs that increase in time and skill as they get older is worse than neglect. They go out in to the world thinking it revolves around them and expect others to treat them the save lavish way. That is not survival of the fittest, or giving something back to earn your keep.

    When Maine kids pick farm potatoes, rake blueberries, dig for clams and help fish or work in the woods, they learn the value of any dollar earned.

    Like their parents, they don’t part with that hard earned money easily unless there is value, quality exhanged with those released dollars held so tightly. When money is not the fuel to run the every day living, it does not become the “drug” to keep those kids entertained, from becoming bored or to waste time.

    If everything is handed to a kid, and nothing is worked for, saved for, dreamed about owning as he or she labors, the items mean nothing special for long when obtained without effort. And just desire for more “stuff”, happens, more material objects to artificially give joy or temperorary contentment. The buying, spending, shopping help kill ideal time that should be spent with chores, household obligations, helping out in the community and making that child’s own spending money. That is real world and creates self sufficient, reliable citizens of tomorrow that don’t have their hand out expecting the world to provide them a living.

    Our Maine youth are not arrogant with an entitlement attitude.

    They are empowered with independence and a fierce pride of workmanship, some control of their own destiny and course of their life. They know their place in the family and that the family would not be the same without them because they contribute, are part of it. Not feeling picked on or abused. Seeing the other members pitching in and working to carry their share too. That makes them more involved, partners in the process. Keeps them occupied in a healthy way too.

    Because Maine is not known as a super affluent state other than pockets of coastal concentrations of wealth, I believe we work harder to create our own existence from the grass roots up. The “necessity is the mother of invention” thinking serves us well and runs thru famliies of three generations..often under on roof like the family farm. When everything day to day does not hinge on having lots of money, or require spending of financial resources a person worked hard to sock away, save, then freedom enters the room and becomes the pattern, rhythm of life.

    Maine’s four season aspect of unspoiled outdoor beauty and license plate label as “Vacationland” means camping, hiking, hunting, fishing local lakes, rivers, streams is the recreation right in our backyard. We’re already in paradise, a heaven on earth setting. And with being the fourth lowest crime state, a sense of local community pride to pitch in and that family is everything, Maine is healthier, sane, simple living. We exist nicely well within our means. Don’t like debt, are not slaves to owing money for anything we don’t really need. Our wants are simple. Family, a house we want to get paid off. Or that we build slowly living in the cellar or in unfinished parts slowing paying as we go with materials and bartered help from friends that we return the favor to. Shouldn’t the country’s government, spending, policies be operated the same down to earth, feet on the ground way? Has that gone out of style or is the pendulum swinging back to minimalist, simple living. Day to day where reduce, resuse, recycle and gain control of spending is the daily goal?

    Maine’s property prices are probably what you are used to divided by three and four or more. Way way less zeros in those real estate selling figures.

    The low cost Maine real estate is one big reason it is easier to live the simple, lower cash outlay life and depend on less of a salary but get so much more quality of living for our kids, families.

    Plus being a little further up here in the right hand corner of the country helps insulate us from all the factors folks do not like about urban areas around cities. We don’t have the crime, smog, traffic, high cost of living. Maine is the way life should be. Inexpensive.

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