Category: Uncategorized

  • Old Maine Farm Houses Had Many Unique Features In Them.

         Root cellars to store winter vegetables, summer kitchens to can and preserve food stuffs in, woodsheds to heat the home and discipline the kids, open front porches for summer evening talks and iced tea.    Older homes, especially farmsteads also had large primary kitchens off the pantries to handle the ten children plus families that had to eat quickly to get back to their chores. Where they were on the family farm varied. Maybe they found themselves planted in the back  forty, or the apple orchard, orthe woodlot or in the barn throwing down hay, watering and graining the livestock.

         Could you trade in your urban lifestyle for country living in Maine? Would you had over the keys to the Volvo, Lexus, Land Rover for ones to fire up the John Deere or Farmall?  Start

    Cultivate Crops, Raising Critters On A Maine Farm
    Cultivate Crops, Raising Critters On A Maine Farm

    by recalling summer visits to your grandparents who lived on a farm, considering it is not all glamous and outdoor living on a sunny day. You are self employed and production is the key without a guaranteed hourly wage or salary. Cutting your ties to corporate America. Sign up for Mother Earth News, and other publications to help you consider a hobby farm full or part time and make sure your mate is on the same page.

    Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers – Maine Farms And Land Equal A Self Sufficient, Simpler  Lifestyle

  • Things I Learned At 9 Years Old Selling Vegetables On A Maine Farm.

         After school I would come home on the bus to our farm a mile and a half from town.

          Have a little snack and in the fall, before harvest it would be a trip to the field to pick corn, cucumbers, squash, peas and then sell them to folks coming round the clock before supper time. Summers spent cultivating and hoeing and also havesting strawberries to the same crowd. 

         One lesson that did not make sense was the lady in the Cadillac who wanted the best 13 ears that we gave for corn

    Farm I Grew Up On In Houlton Maine
    Farm I Grew Up On In Houlton Maine

    and would proceed to rip back and inspect lots of corn. With a baker’s dozen, the extra ear and fact our corn did not have worms and was fresh should have made her happy. She was often not much fun, complained about the cost and was always in a major hurry. On the other side of the coin, you have a lady with the rusted Rambler who was pleasant, tipped me a dollar, told me any 13 ears of corn or other vegetables were fine. She needed the dollar tip herself and the lady in the Cadillac that had the money, worried about letting go of any.  One of many early lessons on the farm growing up in Aroostook County.

    Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers – Maine Living Is Simple, Honest, Real.

  • Making Video To Showcase Maine.

         My real job is to list, market, sell Maine real estate. But in the process of doing blogs, videos, advertising efforts for real estate, making community videos also becomes part of the process to put the spotlight on in my case, Houlton Maine.   Video can be a mix of stills like maps, graphics and say summer pictures of a property listed in the winter to forego a second video being needed. Today there is still snow on the ground, March 28th so any videos in the next two weeks rather than delay production will use stills from a time

    Capture the local color of the area in making Maine real estate and community videos.
    Capture the local color of the area in making Maine real estate and community videos.

    without snow, with green grass and flowers hopefully if we can scan and weave them into the video for each property we do.

         We also do not just show the property building only, but the road in, the area. We want to capture the birds singing, the loons, the wind in the pines.  Hit all the senses..we have five, not just eye sight to take it all in or experience with. And lastly, unlike many areas where all a broker does is sell homes, homes, homes, in Maine our office sells land, waterfront, farms, businesses and basically the area too with community video. Here’s a 100 acres and Maine cabin video over 3000 sets of eyeballs have scanned and that you can consider if you want to be off the beaten path! It’s asking price $79,900.

    Me REALTOR Andrew Mooers

  • Show Me An In Town Upscale Houlton Maine Home.

    Okay. Here’s A Federal Style Home For Sale With 3 Fireplaces, 5 Bedrooms And Tons Of Features Like Stained Glass, Tin Ceilings, Woodwork Woodwork Woodwork! $299,500!

    Federal Style Houlton Maine Home For Sale!
    Maine Home For Sale In Houlton Maine

    Big Corner Lot Is Double Sized And Location Short Walk (5 Blocks) To Down Town From This 90 Court Street home in Houlton Maine.  Explore Aroostook County And Atlantic Canada Next Door! This One Has 2 Stairways, Tin Ceilings, Stained Glass, Open Porch! The Woodwork Is Stunning And Not Just In Isolated Areas..But Everywhere Thru Out This Pampered Landmark. The Cherry Formal Dining Room Is Amazing With Period Lights And Butler’s Pantry! Entertain Here1 Ideal Candidate For Bed And Breakfast Or Inn!

    Federal Style Houlton Maine Home For Sale!

    Enjoy The Video Below And Ask Some Questions!  info@mooersrealty.com

    Tap 207.532.6573

    Log On http://www.mooersrealty.com

  • What’s It Like Peddling Property In A Small Maine Town?

    When you live in a little rural Mayberry type town, that is what you are selling…small town values.  Friendly people and a community that cares.

      Trusting, no locked doors, willing to help.  Northern Maine prices are so much lower than the rest of the world as the jobs are rewarding but giant pay to sport a couple Hummers in the yard is not the reason to move here.  You won’t make as much money…but you won’t need to.  Homes for $39,900…what’s the catch?  Ahhh..let’s get out the map (unfolding sound of paper map)  You are here (pointing) and way way up here on the Canadian border..Yes..that’s Houlton Maine.  Aroostook County is the size of Connecticut and Rhode Island…and only 11 people per square mile.  No road rage…no long delay getting across town.  When you are a rural broker, property with land….farm type

    Harvesting Maine potatoes with machinery and high school students.
    Harvesting Maine potatoes with machinery and high school students.

    listings are asked for alot.  Selling single family homes in town is part of the gig, but acreage..getting the Jeep out back on the rear 40 acres is what many that want the path less traveled are interested in. 

         Since 911, folks in the populated areas have not felt safe…and their life is like a gerbil on a treadmill…frantic.  They decide to cash in their real estate chips there…have some money left over after buying the farm or farmette or victorian in Northern Maine.  Before they have a stroke and have to retire in the city, they opt out for rural america.  Baked beans Saturday night.  Church on Sunday, and maybe even Wednesday night. 4th of July parades with homemade floats, little leaguers marching, high school bands, yesteryear autos…and plenty of horses, fire trucks and armed forces units!  Community involved on local boards, sponsorship of everything group going because you make your money here and want to give back…that’s life where the sky is bluer…the stars are brighter…and the people are spaced with lots of elbow room.  Slow down…explore life in rural Maine.  Grab a granola bar…turn on the Crosby Stills and Nash…reach for the Mother Earth News and start walking, sitting on porches watching sunsets and living…not just mad dash work work work!

         School goes in three weeks early the end of summer..and then youngsters get out for three weeks of harvest when the potatoes are ready to pick! For pickers, 60 cents a barrel which is four baskets full and weights 165 pounds.  For potato house and harvester workers the big minimum wage…which seems like a fortune to local 16 year olds that want an ipod or new stylish winter coat.  The kids take better care of what they buy…and they choose carefully not wasting any of their own money. They equate if something is worth say six barrels of potatoes if sixty cents a barrel is the pay per barrel. They learn how hard money is to make, and what it buys or does not buy depending on how much time you put into getting the best trade. Better impulse control happens too when it comes to spending habits with their own money.

    Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers

  • Can You See Yourself With A Piece Of Grass Hanging Out Of Your Mouth?

    Where I grew up in Houlton Maine
    Where I grew up in Houlton Maine

         You finished your second cup of black coffee as the sun rises…off to the barn to throw some hay down for the small critters you are raising.     Your partner is getting up too and fixing a big hearty breakfast. You have plans if the weather cooperates to climb on the old John Deere B tractor to pull a plow thru the back five acre field. If you get rained out, there is a box stall door needing repair and a long list from the job jar to tackle. Jack up the settling porch. Fix the fence charger. Head to town for parts.

        This is Maine farming. No extra money to hire out the chores, repairs, updates. You can do it. You become a bit of a mechanic, part gambler, a half baked carpenter but all with the satisfaction of working the good earth. You burn wood from the sections out back that are studded with mixed hardwoods. Four out of five Maine homes burn oil but your home is not heated that way. The six cords out back cut, split and ready to throw in the cellar proves it. You work steady. You are not pinned to a wall or chained behind a desk. Everything around you is paid for. The home needs paint, but you are not worried or trying to impress anyone. It will get painted but your farm building repairs take priority as they are where you make your living.

         You enjoy lemonade on the open porch at dusk, have no trouble sleeping and feel more alive than you have in years. Fresh produce from the garden. A cow you named Sirloin in your freezer is what’s being served on tonight’s menu at your Maine spread.

         Your grandfather was a farmer and you remember bean suppers, summer canning and helping out around the place summers when you were “knee high to a grasshopper”.  With the high cost of living, worries about heating your home in the city, are you ready to sell out, head north to Maine? Low cost living, high quality of life, longer years of being in the great outdoors and self sufficient. Sound like something you would like to try? You’ve had these thoughts for some time, that something’s been missing?

       Maine..the way life should be. For fun you explore the back roads of Maine on snowsleds and atvs, your neighbors are deer, moose, wild birds. The best part? Elbow room, space, friendly fewer people, no crime. Runaway from where you are living now while you are healthy. Your family will benefit too from the local community values and courtesy. They still exist in Aroostook County! Dependent on the soil, the weather, each other.  Having everything you need, not necessarily everything you want and being patient.  Could you see yourself on a Maine farm?

    Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers