Category: Uncategorized

  • Me In Maine WordPress Blog | Why We Needs Bees Please.

    Maine Busy Bees. Protect Them.
    Just Doing Their Important Job. Buzzing, Flying, Pollinating Flowers, Veggie Plants, Fruit Trees.

    Bumble and honey bees in Maine being industrious, driven to perform what they were placed on the Earth to do is a very good thing.

    But pesticides, development and lack of concern for their well being has hurt farming in Maine, elsewhere. Colony Collapse Disorder is slowly killing our precious busy bees.

    Our winged, buzzing pollinators have a bigger job of importance than many realize. Making sure pollen and seeds get UPS’ed to another flower. Some other forty acre field land three townships away. Fertilizing plants so food happens. Without bees, our crops around the world would not do, grow so hot. And some plants would die off, go ka-put. Extinct, no more thank you helpings of this or that to try.

    As parents coax with the same old story about starving kids halfway around the world. To guilt you into how grateful you should be for that pile of lima beans. Or mmmm good steaming stewed tomatoes puddled on the dinner plate. Now cooling off before the hopefully one way gullet trip. Using a bottoms up, wash it down the hatch move to win clearance to leave the table. Freedom to get outside to play.

    Don’t get in their way and bee, hornet, wasp stinging attack action does not happen is what I taught the kids.

    They have a job to do. Growing up, reminding them the same advice I was told. Leave them alone to make their rounds. To do touch and go landings on flowers, vegetable plants, fruit trees around the Maine farm. And it was explained in the case of a bumblebee, if he has to sting you, it is a last ditch kamikaze harpoon maneuver. With no way out, no turning back. Do and die. Once the barb is launched better hope the bee’s affairs are in order. When it is let loose, it rips ups, tears out the bees vital innards. Kills, silences the buzzing bee for good who is turned inside out.

    So like the pilot in the front of the airplane, who has a family and a 401K pension, a golf game to steadily improve his handicap on, does not want to die.

    Lovely Lupines, Spread By Bees Pollinating.
    Lupines, Beautiful Maine Flowers Considered To Technically Be A Weed. Spread Quickly By Busy Bees.

    Just not on the clipboard, in his life flight plan manifest radioed into the tower before take off.

    So enjoying their handiwork from a distance, putting the car window down to help him escape so he lives to buzz another day is important stuff. More than just honey produced you like to put in the medicine to help it go down. Or the other real medicinal effects bee honey provides us.

    Know a local fellow that does not complain anymore about black flies at his Maine lake camp.

    He said he found a cure. And it was not fogging the grounds for temporary relief solution either. Or putting up a bug zapping UV eerie hanging light. Where you see and hear the electrical contacts. Can count the winged dead row grid casualties. No no. He had found something more permanent. To rid the Maine lake lot of the pests once and for all. It came in a black bottle with a skull and crossbones pirate looking warning. Definitely not over the counter stuff found in aisle five of the lawn and leisure at Wally World or some other big box store.

    He got rid of the Maine black flies, the mosquitoes.

    But scratched his head and did have to admit there were not bees buzzing, no birds singing each day either. Napalmed those critters off the face of his grounds. Using a substance experimented with on foreign soil to control the local population in time of warfare defoliant. And you have to wonder what it does to his own, the family’s, his lake front neighbor’s DNA, chromosomes in some genetic life altering way. How harmful residue is to anyone down wind from his property on the Maine Lake.

    Maine Honey To Collect, Milk From Flowers, Vegetables, Fruits.
    Honey To Collect, Flowers, Fruit Trees, Vegetables To Visit No Matter What The Weather. Like The Postman.

    This is the same Maine lake property owner that removed way more trees than shoreland zoning regulations allow.

    And when I told him there are big fines, penalties, let alone the damage it does to the Maine waterfront in added soil erosion, he shrugged his shoulders. Silt that leaches into the Maine lake and choke fish did not seem to be keeping him up nights. I asked him how do you explain what happened? He said you play dumb, act surprised.

    And tell the investigating powers to be it was the most peculiar thing.

    When he went to bed, the stand of thick trees were soldier at attention, shoulder straight out front. But in the morning, wind sheer must have happened and they had fallen like bowling pins. Helter skelter, willy nilly in one big mess. And he was some kind of upset but had to clean up the debris, landscaping chaos. Blaming the trimming, need for dead tree removal on the weather. Not his own late at night or in the fall when less eyeballs, eardrums are around a Maine lake dark activities. Great.

    Not a story I enjoy telling. Protect the birds and bees. Be a good steward of the Maine waterfront. Respecting it, passing it on to your kids in better shape than you were lucky enough to receive it.

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

  • (Alarm Clock Beep Beep) Maine, Are You Still Awake?

    Maine Homemade Outdoor Fun.
    Maine, Making Our Own Fun. Wake Up, Get Outdoors And Slide, Laugh, Spill Together.

    Mainers are viewed as pretty grounded, solid, a little outspoken and definitely as independent thinkers.

    Remember the catch phrase “As Maine goes, so goes the nation.” It’s nothing new. Just with the speed of thought information available to us with the Internet age we live in, more about life in Maine pops up. The simple, real, honest lifestyle glimpses here is available, appears online now with regularity. In images of Maine, videos of Vacationland and blogs about the Pine Tree State. Like this one you are slurping a coffee. Taking the time to read, read, read. Thank you.

    The think for yourself part in Maine happens for lots of reasons.

    First, look where we are located. Hello. (Tap tap of the World map pointer.) So far north we should be, almost are in Canada. Off by yourself means others leave you alone. There just are not many others. So becoming self reliant, more dependent on yourself for survival and entertainment skills is a given. Jack of all trades training starts as a young grasshopper. Where we are helps make us what we need to be.

    Maine, we are not a state flush with money to just peel off a hundred dollar bill for this. Whip out some plastic to stripe the magnetic strip for that. We pretty much are self contained. Happiness, joy, contentment from within, not from others, events or situations external alone. Working to improve, be better, to have a purpose. And definitely, please don’t call me lazy. Day to day doing our part for what we need to provide for the simple things. Basics like food, shelter, family, love. That’s more than enough.

    When your life is less dependent on material items, there’s no need to impress or create envy, it leaves plenty of space in your head and heart for the natural beauty and order of things.

    The wonder of what’s around you in a drop dead gorgeous state like Maine gets the respect it deserves. We live in Vacationland full time. Are already here in the place most only get to dream about, maybe enjoy just one long weekend. To squeeze out a string of seven days a year if they are really lucky each year. And that’s all she wrote. Until the calendar gets untacked, tossed, replaced.

    The journey to get here is like if you were a lunar astronaut. You just traveled the odd 240,000 miles and don’t unpack. Get too comfortable. And well, better start thinking about heading home. Back to the revolving, slightly tilted dark blue, deep green marble with the whip cream cloud formation. Cause it’s quite a hike, and incredible journey. Kinda low on fuel and time’s a ticking anxious happens. But you have to go this far to get this nice.

    Maine, we’re insulated, not isolated.

    Close to everything around you required. For no or low cost to provide a full, rich life once you land here. The good stuff in life for free here what is not available for any amount of money elsewhere happens all day long in Maine. And for the record just so’s you know, there are no polar bears in Maine. They prefer colder places. So let’s do some mental housekeeping. Tidying up and whisking away that little myth about our Maine weather, climate once and for all okay?

    So back to the lead in blog post headline that got you to pull back the flap, side step into the tent. Mainers think for themselves. Less concerned about what everyone else is doing, thinking. Wary of polls and surveys that say 99% of folks feel, think, buy, pray, vote this or that way. We don’t have a lot of crutches for insecurities. Are not duped easily. Common sense and realistic is hard wired inside. Stand on our own two feet. Make our own decisions after careful thought, inner reflection and guidance from above.

    Our Maine families, local communities, our craft or labor define us.

    We don’t pay for what is public information in a small local Maine town. Angie’s List for piece of mind of which plumber, electrician, real estate broker or restaurant to eat at is not needed. Word gets around in a tightly knit community about all that. Who’s good and cheap. Who’s expensive but talented. Who is a nice guy but not so hot, and who cares what they charge. Not the one to pick if you ask a local.

    But in large impersonal cities, where no one knows or trusts everyone, you need lots of expensive “tour guides” to help you get around. To bob and weave. Avoid rope a dope. Getting ground pounded. To make decisions for you. For the best experience when you’re in a hurry which is always. To think for a fee for you. Assembling what is public information already, lots of what you supplied and making you pay to get it back. Boy, that is stupid. Not the way we would waste, spend our hard earned money in Maine. Not for monthly fees to monitor our credit report either. We pay our bills. Don’t do debt. Don’t like credit, avoid it like the plague.

    Maine, lots of reasons to be here. Come for a day, end up staying a life time.

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

  • Moderation, Discipline, Defining Moments Living In Maine.

    Say Cheese. Crowd Closer Together.
    Pull Closer, Come Together, Mainers Are Tightly Knit, Solid People.

    Day to day living in Maine, mostly small rural tightly knit communities, means moderation, discipline and gratitude for all we have.

    The sheer beauty of the unspoiled outdoors of Maine causes wonderment, intrigue, an inner peace. As we motivate from within to ask “what needs to be done today” before the sun sets? And for days without an amber gold, red, orange, pink and a host of other colors at it’s dusk, that lacks any sunshine during the waking hours, a little discomfort does not keep us from our goals. Doing what’s right.

    Because no matter what the “weather” in life, we are all in it together, need each other in Maine.

    Daily we all strive to keep march to a standard of performance. We don’t ease up, back off waiting for conditions to improve. We are driven to make the most of things. To accept what we have for situations. To tell ourselves it could be worse, buck up. March steadily upward, onward. So that each day we achieve results.

    To win the battle of life a day at a time. and eventually the war in the role we play. With the help of other people introduced, brought into our paths. And you and I placed in their life for a reason. But it is up to us to be ever mindful, vigilant to see red flags. Recognize missed opportunities and take ownership of our part in the calamity, setbacks not just the gains. To modify the steps we take today, and the direction we march tomorrow. Being creative, flexible, not rigid, to clearly see the landscape paths before us.

    Life is not all fun and games.

    Respect can mix, partner, “fuel” the contented feeling that all of us are just so darn lucky, well off, fortunate. And that no one likes, enjoys a whiner who is ungrateful and does not realize that. Who has little company except other poor is me types if they don’t. Discipline does not mean being over stretched, over extended.

    Discipline tempered with moderation means consistently pacing ourselves but at the same time pushing yourself. To always see the target, to achieve results. At times adjusting side blinders like carriage horses who’s owners help them avoid distractions, confusion in the environment. Neighborhoods they must clip clop through ahead of them. Before grain, water, hay, liniment and dry shelter at the end of the day. Before more of the same routine tomorrow, the day after that. Using what you have within you. Not giving up and wishing for talents you lack. Or think you do not possess that are right there in all of us. Just dormant, hibernating, untapped, unacknowledged. For now not exercised, called on or developed more fully when because we lose focus. Be calm. See, accept and prepare for what’s up ahead.

    Storms in life can seem like loss of control.

    Calm seas, safe harbors and sunny weather are much more enjoyable when your feet are held to the fire during the discomfort though. When struggles open you up, have faith while letting go. While forced, placed on your knees to have to listen. Acknowledging life is short, all of us are beginners. Being taught growing up to get your chores done, finish your peas. Wipe your feet, brush your teeth. To wake up keeping always mindful of the task ahead of you. To do a good job because it reflects on you. Illustrates what you are made of, who you are. What you are capable of, showing your commitment to excellence. Which is the passion, its own reward generated from within from the work ethic Maine is famous, well known.

    If it is to be, it is up to me means no waiting around, wasting daylight. Not lashing out or blaming others for setbacks which are really pertinent defining lessons. What each of us takes responsibility for, ownership of to advance to the next level. Not taught to expect someone to do it for you. Not fooling yourself with a flip remark that “oh, that’s good enough”. But being your best, making it better than it was before you got involved. That is where a Mainer’s sense of purpose percolates from within all of us in the Pine Tree state.

    To some discipline makes their dander come up, feels like punishment, being controlled by others.

    Causes their back to stiffen to prepare for battle because you are being forced to do something beyond your will. And resistance wells within with a growl, grimace, snarl of “don’t tell me what to do”. Fear of loss of control hopefully slowly replaced with understanding. Eventually, sooner better than later the wisdom that what is right is not always easy, comfortable and or just whatever feels good. And that giving in does not mean total loss of your will to make other decisions if you do. Stop fighting. Don’t be scared. No need for fear.

    Hang loose, get your sleep, things will look better tomorrow. Say your prayers, today Hebrews 12:11 the focus for this blog post. You have done all you can for today. The “It is well with my soul” chorus in my head during the hunt and peck. And underneath it all we are taught to be grateful, happy, content from within ourselves. For all that is truly good in our life, our soul. See the good in others, stick together.

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

  • About The Middle Of January, Play Practice Starts In Smyrna Maine.

    Home Grown Local Maine Plays, Community Theatre.
    Nothing Entertains Like Community Theatre, Local Plays. Especially With Local Talent.

    Play practice, theatre production in the twin Maine towns of Smyrna and Merrill begins mid January.

    And by April the Maine play spring production bugs have been worked out. The many practices, read through over and over of stage lines. Cast selection, discussion of needed props, what period costumes all held after work every Friday night. Leading up to the house lights dimming, the curtain being raised. And on with the show. Break a leg.

    It’s lots of work, plenty of fun and what a feeling of accomplishment. When after the laughs, tears and in between, the parts are played out. The audience responds at the curtain fall of a small local Maine community theater. And you get a standing room only, everyone on their feet curtain call applause. From all sixty five local theatre play patrons. Clapping, wolf whistling, shouting out words of approval. Giving back their sincere appreciation to another troupe performance in the former Methodist Church property bought for $15,000 by the Smyrna Merrill Historical Society.

    The live, show must go on with the Maine local theatre audience connecting with the players.

    Making them work harder. Everything all tied, based on the reaction the cast receives. Hears, sees and just senses up on stage. Under the bright lights. Wearing all the make up and while acting, each playing their assigned part to the hilt, maximum in the current play. Creating comedy, performing a musical, drama… the good kind.

    The Southern Aroostook County drama, usually a comedy directed by Alberta McDonald. McDonald who has a day job in the town office that shares both Smyrna and Merrill muncipal government functions. Smart. Under one roof because each town is small. Like most in Maine. Especially Aroostook County that boasts only eleven people per square mile. In a land mass the exact same size as the entire states of Connecticut and Rhode Island combined. The troop of thespians have packed up, traveled north to Bridgewater Maine. Acting out on the road to perform at their historical society on US Rt 1 in what was formerly a Grange hall building.

    McDonald loves the local community theatre, the Maine performing arts.

    Was involved acting in more than most of area local high school productions. The desire to act, to create a play production never faded. I asked her about the costs involved. She shared the figure of about six hundred dollars for a play. She says Hit Plays dot com also lets you pre-screen for free. So you don’t order and then groan when you figure out this is not best for the cast you have to work with. But you had to take a chance because most sites don’t allow the free read through, demo spin before you part with money.

    Some of the productions, that are all a fun income generator for the non profit Smyrna – Merrill Historical Society, are dinner theatres. Sit down full course meals, dining fare tied to the theme of the play. To enhance the experience of acting combined with good home cooked Maine food. And served graciously by the cast, always in character. The former church roof now turned to historical society, play production headquarters is needing new shingles or a metal covering. To keep the northern Maine weather outside where it belongs.

    Past productions included The 12 Daze of Christmas, Mugsy Sent Me, Hood of Sherwood. This spring’s play is The Great Nursing Home Escape. Snacks will include jello and prunes. Alberta McDonald beamed, lit up telling me about the production. The great cast she has to work with, all her local neighbors. It’s a way off off Broadway theatre production. A dinner theatre play this year with two performances, April 26 and 27th at 6pm.

    But because of the very small size of the Maine theatre play production, it is special, intimate and live.

    Definitely local Maine. Like a pot luck supper where the best everyone has to offer gets brought in a covered dish. Cooked up, served up on stage. Or by the crew during the meal in cast character as they dish it out. For the pleasure, entertainment of a local community where everyone on stage knows all the members of the audience. And many are somehow related, connected in the small surrounding communities of Northern Maine.

    Maine, we make our own fun. Money is not needed and it’s low cost, no cost entertainment across the board.

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

  • Big National Disaster Hits, Everyone Worries About The People, But What About Pets?

    What About The Pets, Animals That Lose Their Homes?
    Animals, Pets Get Affected By National Disasters Too.

    You watch, listen, read about awful national disaster events like Sandy, Katrina and your heart goes out to the people that live in those areas.

    Thinking gee, if that was me, my family that suddenly saw the day to day go from easy, predictable to very hard and scary. Full of unknowns.

    So when the Red Cross, FEMA, emergency personnel swoop in to meet the needs of the struggling communities that were in the path of the disaster, what about Spot, Puff, Rover, Fluffy? The pets lost in the shuffle and separated from their owners in the emergency evacuations? Or that have no owners, are displaced and on the streets. On their own to fend for themselves like the homeless.

    Houlton Maine Humane Society’s Cathy Davis told me yesterday that often the pets are never reunited with their owners.

    Because they get taken to animal shelters far away for care when the local animal shelter is destroyed. And attention to finding adults, children, loved ones in the wreckage, getting them to hospitals or morgues takes priority. And the four legged furry friends can’t speak up, have to fend for themselves in the wild during the lapse of animal shelter care. Or the original pet owners are dead, or in hospitals and not able to track down where they are to reunite.

    She also said Maine is an open arms state to take in strays, pets displaced because of a disasters. But every state has rules about animals crossing their borders. Did an earlier Me In Maine blog post on rescue horses, cat and dog adoptions. New Jersey with Sandy’s weather tantrum has state laws that would not just let animals be relocated to Maine. Even though the support was there, desire to do so. Mobile units to meet the lost and found pet needs went into gear during Sandy. Food, water, medical attention needed by pets just like humans.

    But eventually all these pets rounded up and then transported to other full time facilities which mean lots of owners never were reunited.

    Her story made me thing of concentration camps during World War Two. Because even though the animals were taken in from temporary emergency mobile units. Then shuffled to full time shelters, the new distant centers that were already overburdened. Not equipped with money or manpower to meet the animal’s needs until adoption could happen. Or reuniting with the owners could take place. So sadly, many pets in time put to sleep. Time runs out looking for a new adoptive home. Those animals that did not get killed in the disaster, just had their ultimate death sentence delayed in the chaos, aftermath of the calamity. When adoptive homes could have been found if state laws allowed transport to new areas of the country.

    The plight of animals displaced so much like human adoption in foreign countries.

    Because of war or their own set of natural disasters that disrupt day to day life. Some orphanages like ones in Korea according to local Maine Adoption Placement Agency’s Dawn Degendhardt told the Houlton Rotary Club meeting a while ago wondered why would someone want to adopt a special needs child? Ones warehoused, isolated from public view in that country like our nation used to do.

    Kids treated like outcasts living at Misfit Island.

    When someone in Texas with two special needs children wants to adopt another. And there are kids out there needing a warm, loving, nurturing home round the world. Dawn said a light came on and the gruesome thought was voiced that American’s wanted those broken Korean kids for parts. Whoa.

    When you hear, see, read about a disaster on the news, do you think about the animals left behind or stranded because of it?

    And what happens to them? You would if it was your own family pet in a large population area with thousands of them displaced. And you had no idea where to begin to look when all the local intrastructure is destroyed, gone, missing. Support your local animal rescue shelters. They do good work in emergency rescue. Not just finding homes, caring for pets in day to day operations.

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

  • International Dog Sled Races In Fort Kent Maine Start March 2nd.

    Aroostook County, Home Of Can Am Dog Sled Team Races.
    The 21st Annual International Dog Sled Teams Race In The Fort Kent Can Am Event.

    Mush, not the playing with your food kind, the Northern Maine International Dog Sled Race kind in Fort Kent ME.

    Head up 1-95, then Rt 1, 1A or 11 to the top of Aroostook County. Sign in for the 21st Annual Can Am Crown Northern Maine dog sled races. Starts Friday March 1, wraps up with awards Tuesday March 5th. There are 250, 60, 30 mile grueling dog sled runs to pick from with different course checkpoints, for this list of 2013 Can-Am mushers.

    The Fort Kent “Crown Of Maine” Can Am International Dog Sled Races are consistently run, building in popularity and mushers, supporters become close like family.

    Watch the past International CAN AM Maine dog sled team video.

    If you’re not busy and want to take in a winter Maine dog sled racing event, head to Aroostook County. All the way to the top of Maine, and meet the warm, friendly, genuine people of Fort Kent. Smack dab on the Canadian – US border.

    Winter is not a time of hibernation. Maine is outdoor living, recreation year round.

    Watch other videos from past International World Cup Biathlon Maine winter events.

    Womens World Cup IBU Biathlon In Presque Isle Maine Video.

    Or maybe snow sledding, skiing in Northern Maine is your idea of fun. The best winter recreational way to spend your day outdoors in the fresh air, sunshine.

    Big Rock Ski Area, Mars Hill Maine Video

    Or hop the US Canadian border and put on the boards.

    Point those snow skis down Crabbe Mountain, New Brunswick Canada video.

    Maine winter outdoor fun is only limited by your imagination. Bundle up, if you are cold you are not dressed properly. Or you need to move those legs, swing those arms. Put more effort into the Maine winter recreation. Get to Maine, no matter what season. Make her a habit, healthy addiction that you can not break.

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