Category: Uncategorized

  • Maine Snowmobiling…Yeah, We’ve Got The Snow, The Sled Trails.

    Red Cheeks, Hearty Appetite, Energy Drained Make Happy Maine Kids.
    Red Cheeks, Hearty Appetite, Energy Drained Make Happy Maine Kids.

    Mainers do not camp out on winter couches, with a bowl of cheese O’s in one hand, the remote television changer in the other hand. They get outside every chance they get.

    And in the winter if not playing pond hockey on a clear spot on a nearby lake or ice arena, or down hill skiing on little hills, big hills, they often snowsled. Maybe a little trail ride on Maine’s 13,000 mile network to just put to a sled club or local diner for something to eat. Or taking a 300 mile trip, a loop where you see Maine deer, moose and other wildlife. Not to mention the beauty of Mt Katahdin, a roaring river, a rolling field or windy woods trail along the way.

    This winter, see Maine a whole new way. Going place you can not get by car or jeep. In the heart of Maine. From Kittery to Fort Kent Maine, see it on a snowsled. More than 280 Maine snowsled clubs groom, maintain the unique state trail system, each doing there part. Called everything from a snow machine, snowsled, snowmobile to skidoo, they are words to describe, spell out and promise Maine winter fun. Come explore, discover some of the best sled trails in Northern American in Maine.

    Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers

  • Messages, Signals, Pleas, Warnings, Notices, Communication Bombardment.

    Happy Maine Teenager Working In Potato House.
    Happy Maine Teenager Working In Potato House.

    Everyday and every minute of every day, you and I are the target of communication. Some we want and welcome.

    Some live and local ME rural lifestyle…this video involving youth during the Maine potato harvest. Others just not avoidable. From the newspaper headline or advertisement circular to the commercial messages piggy backed in a video on youtube we are radiated daily with messages, requests, demands, suggestions for services, products. Sometimes just images, photos, pictures..no words, no copy..just images move us, affect us deeply.
    In Maine, it is often said what we don’t have here is the biggest attraction. We are not crime central..Maine is the 4th lowest crime state. Our four season beauty is not a secret anymore. The outdoor four season recreational options are countless, limitless. The people of Maine are fewer but friendlier. And the bottom line is keep it simple, real, small town community proud. As a Maine realtor, a big part of my job is to just tell, show, talk about what the area is like. Years ago, a Maine real estate broker listed, marketed, sold property mainly to local buyers.

    With the internet explosion, the market blew wide open and the world became an oyster and so much smaller. If you are proud of where you live, raise a family, enjoy the surroundings, that is what the blog message, the posts are suppose to relay, communicate.
    If you have any questions about Maine, are looking for information, call, click, come visit us. info@mooersrealty.com 207.532.6573 Log on www.mooersrealty.com Or visit 69 North Street, Houlton Maine 04730
    Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers

  • Three TV Channels In Northern Maine Growing Up…Was Something Missing?


    Growing up in Aroostook County, being glued to a television set, eating whole pizzas in one sitting and spending hours and hours on a family couch did not happen.

    For starters, in the 1960’s, before satelite television, before XM, before internet or movie rental places, the television early on was black and white. Don’t get me wrong we did have a set in the front living room intially. I can remember 1963…a cold November getting off the bus at the end of a long farm house driveway that is still lined with large maple trees. And in the farm home as I put books and lunch box down, hearing my mom ironing telling me to come here. On the black and white television, there was the developing, unfolding news of President John F Kennedy being shot, killed. Mom irons and watches and like 911, the instant enormity of the event hit even me, a little kid of almost seven years of age. Something far far away was very wrong and the world would never be the same.

    Later I remember watching the “one small step for mankind” moon walk on another trusty television at my Aunt Ruth’s horse riding summer camp.The room jammed full of other sitting, standing, sitting boys and girls. Kids out of state cities who’s lawyer, doctor parents sent them away to Maine until the falll school session resumed. Vietnam death statistics each night televised by Walter reading with black rimmed glasses helping us keep track of lost GI’s halfway around the globe in rice paddies many many clicks down the road. Another loop in my head. But other than fuzzy recall of Bonanza, Batman, Bewitched and Walter’s nightly visit in my living room, being stuck, planted in front of, droaning out to and mesmorized by a cathode ray television did not happen. Watching the set other than evenings when it was raining or nothing else scheduled outside like a ball game on the lawn with neighbor kids. The set did not complete the family day to day picture in my head. Serial shows like westerns, cop shows, game shows and Art Linkletter, Mister Rogers or Sesame Street were watched but the set was not running, on all the time or in the background.

    Kids were outside using their imaginations, working up a healthy appetite and eating regularly scheduled meals. Chores, working for spending money, mowing lawns first. Then taking on bigger jobs.

    I was lucky in high school to be spnning records at 14, reading news from the AP teletype at a radio station owned by Howdy Doody, Buffallo Bob Smith. Howdy owned three Maine radio stations.

    If television tube addiction had been a seed waiting to germinate and take off like Jack’s bean stock, there would have been one big obstacle to working on that passion, obsession. Signals, programs for the television set in the front living room. And lots of free downtime time to waste plugging in mentally, detaching in front of it. One set in the home meant family viewing, not going to your room and tuning in too.

    But remember in rural Northern Maine’s Arootook County, one television station in Presque Isle ME was it for “local programming.” WAGM, Channel 8 was a cherry picker, one of four if I remember right in the entire country that could pick this, this and from the three networks at the time. Basically a CBS affiliate television station but able to select programming from ABC, NBC to round out the broadcasting day. Before the national anthem and test pattern toned out at midnight. Oh sure, we had an off air signal of a Canadian channel or two depending on the weather, the antennae on the farm house roof. And eventualy public broadcasting beamed channel ten into our living room. But that was it. No cable, no channel surfing when you have basically three channels. Did it hurt me, stunt my brain’s development? No.

    But before you think that poor Northern Maine real estate broker was television deficient growing up, I did get to see the NBC peacock expand her plume in living color when I visited my Great Aunt Hettie on Franklin Avenue in Houlton Maine. She had cable and always the latest largest television model on the market at the time. New hows I never saw before. Thanksgiving movies of religious epics, or the Wizard of Oz. The television set more modern. You know, the ones with a record player, radio on one side of a lid that lift. Beautiful wood cabinet design that made it a real piece of living room furniture. The kind where the television went on the blink, wore out and died way way before the cabinet would fail or need replacement. Cable television to a kid from the Maine country in a small hustle bustle town was big stuff. But still it did not develop in to an addiction. Nor did it lead to scheming how to spend more time in front of it. Because with mini bikes, chores around the farm that were built in and expected from early on, our childhood day was pre-programmed with other more important, pressing activities.

    Our front porch was used a lot. So was the home made ice cream maker. Picnics in woodlots, at Baxter State Park. Vacations to the Maine coast or over to neighboring Canada. Trips in the summer to Uncle Frank’s camp at Nickerson Lake. Helping hay, pick potatoes, and tinkering on an early make Snojet snowsled where you worked on it for two hours to use it for one. Nowadays, two television sets in my family home. Communication is open, free and apparent at 69 North Street with kids who grew up not glued to a set. Or spend in the lake at a summer camp that up until a few years ago had no dish hook up. Now you wonder how did we live without that many channel choices?

    Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers

  • People I Met Today At A Maine Real Estate Closing.

    Black and white holstein cow looking for grain, an apple, a pat on the head.
    Black and white holstein cow looking for grain, an apple, a pat on the head.

    I make my living selling Maine real estate.

    It has been that way for 30 years. And the people we meet, the lives we get intertwined with in the process is an adventure, an education. Today’s closing in Patten Maine was with a couple who the wife had both parents killed in a car accident. The driver causing it died too for speeds in access of 100 miles per hour. The parents in their 80’s on their way home in Pennsylvania with a load of fire wood on a back road.

    The Maine real estate buyer, the daughter of the couple lost in the wreck had always wanted a log home with a view and a big deck.

    Inheritance helped this couple complete that dream to help forget the nightmare of a sudden loss of both parents. The place they bought with 15 acres of land in Patten ME has a dramatic setting. The price in the low $130,000 range. They lived in Southern Maine, in Wiscasset ME where our one lone nuclear reactor is moth-balled. They said it is getting crowded there and wanted to be closing to the edge of wilderness, less people, more wildlife. Aroostook County / Northern Penobscot County is all that when you are handy to the Allagash Wilderness Waterway, to Baxter State Park’s Mt Katahdin and the other mountains around it to hike, camp out on, to enjoy the solitude.

    My parents are both gone and were in their 80’s too with full lives. You miss them but my three brothers and I did not suddenly lose both of them in a car accident. And like one real estate seller we worked with last year, we all had full childhoods with knowing them well working on a Maine potato farm. Seeing them everyday in the fields, potato house, working on the farm buildings. I had another real estate seller who was eight when both his parents died with another couple in a boat that over turned on Grand Lake in Danforth Maine. He was an only child and went to live with his grandparents.

    So when you think you have it rough, when your day is going straight up hill or sliding backwards, losing ground, think of how hard it could be. With loss of ones you love in not peaceful, easy ways. I think we are blessed with so much to be grateful for if the truth be known and you take serious inventory of events in your life. In small areas of Maine, the communities pull together thru loss and your neighbors, friends, relatives share your pain. Help you through it. To live in a concrete urban jungle where the pace of life is hurried and no one really cares would make you feel a total orphan and cut off from a sense of community. Maine, one more reason to feel connected, part of a family, support group with down to earth, down home concern for others.

    Maine Real Estate

  • Maine Skiing At Sugarloaf..It’s Winter, Kids Home, Enjoying The New Snow.

    Catch some air..some crisp Maine winter air.
    Catch some air..some crisp Maine winter air.

    When you live in a four season Maine type northern climate state, winter is one of the most fun times of year.

    We do not hibernate or stay planted on a couch in Maine. Dress warmly and get out there to ski, snowsled, ice fish, play pond hockey and skate. With fewer people, unspoiled scenery and wild life galore, Maine’s Aroostook County is hard to beat for the blue ribbon as best setting to enjoy the outdoors. Heading off to ski at Sugarloaf with two boys home from college break that Santa got outfitted in brand spanking new hardware. Locally Big Rock ski area is awfully handy, friendly to downhill too.

    Do you ski and enjoy the white outdoors of Maine or another New England state? I find I do my best thinking on the lift heading higher and higher looking out over the expanse. See you on the 16 plus slopes around the state of Maine this winter. Trailer that snowsled to Maine, or strap on the boards to snow ski and snowboard in Maine. Come on up, the snow is piling and calling your name in the wind in the pines. From Houlton Maine in Aroostook County heading to Kingfield and Carrabassett Valley is about a four hour haul. But planning to spend a few days at a neat condo with some red cheeked, laughing kids telling stories about memorable runs and fun had on Maine’s highest snow ski mountain, Sugarloaf USA. Clicking some images, shooting some video to watch and grin at when I am in a old folks home and bored, wanting to remember something rich in family.

    Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers