Tag: bangor maine

  • Orono Bog Boardwalk | Maine Hiking Trails

    Orono Bog Boardwalk | Maine Hiking Trails

    Orono Bog Boardwalk, Maine hiking trails.

    Looking for something healthy to do and in the Bangor / Brewer / Orono area of Maine? This blog post highlights the over six hundred acres, more than 4200′ feet of floating decking known as the Orono Bog Boardwalk.

    orono bog boardwalk
    Welcome To The Orono Bog Boardwalk in Penobscot County Maine.

    The boardwalk technically starts at the wetland edge of the Bangor City Forest.

    But within 800′, you cross the Orono town line. The section of the Orono Bog Boardwalk in the town of Orono is owned by the University of Maine where both Meg and I went to school.

    Meg and I did a quick overnight “staycation” in Bangor Maine this past Saturday and spent walk the trail for about 90 minutes on the Orono Bog Boardwalk.

    The iron bars to grab near the table land or summit. No blue dashes of a hike up Abol trail at Mt Katahdin all missing. No big hills, the four foot wild section of decking creating the  bog walk pathway are easy to maneuver. The low impact walk through the forest sections is all wide, easy to traverse pathways.

    tall pine tree orono bog
    Orono Bog Tree Size, Meg Helps Show How Big This Smasher Is.

    Through out the Orono Bog Boardwalk experience, lots of signage explains which birds, what other wildlife and various vegetation types you will find here.

    Bring your camera and forget any fear of getting lost. The signage maps make it crystal clear where you are, where you can head depending on the time you allow for the Orono Bog Boardwalk.

    trail hikes in maine
    Wide, Easy Walking Trails Criss Cross And Connect The Orono Bog Boardwalk.

    The boardwalk is for walkers, wheelchair access users only.

    We did see foot traffic hikers with leashed dogs on the wooded trail sections. Thousands of hours and dollars went into the Orono Bog Boardwalk creation and improvements.

    lady slipper wild flowers
    Lady Slipper Wild Flowers, One Of The Many You See At Your Orono Bog Walk.

    QR code maps sync you up with the network of trails so no repeat worries about what happened to Goldie Locks.

    The 509 sections of composite decking that ride on aluminum rails, stainless steel footings have rest stop seating areas. Learn more about the Orono Bog Boardwalk.

    orono bog walk flowers
    The Many Flowers You See On Your Orono Bog Walk. Don’t Forget To Bring Your Camera!

    Lady slippers, Labrador tea, cinnamon ferns, cranberry, bog rosemaryy, tuffed cotton grass, round leave sundew.

    The Orono Bog Boardwalk offers up to 140 examples of wildflower species. Lincoln’s sparrows, palm warblers, so many small mammals and amphibians along with random moose or bear might be seen on your bog walk.

    bog walk information
    The Information Spelled Along The Orono ME Bog Woods Trail Hike.

    The tall healthy pine trees impressed me at the Orono Bog Boardwalk.

    Many starting out as one large trunk and then splitting into two as they reached for the sky hungry for sunshine. Winterberry, black ash, oak, red maple along with beech, white birch. Lots of other hard or softwood forest examples provide the scenery and shade along your bog walk. Talk about vegetation and no bugs, no flies. Picked a good day or just kept cuffing along to stay ahead of them. There was breeze and the boardwalk was not over crowded with tourists or locals who frequent this venue.

    orono peat bog walk
    Looking Out Over the Peat Bog In Orono Maine. Lots Of Life Happening As You Look Closer.

    The Orono Maine raised peat Bog Boardwalk is designated as a National Natural Landmark by the National Park service.

    30,000 visitors walk the mile long boardwalk that is a popular local exercise option. Learn more about the natural aspects, the history of the Orono Bog Boardwalk.

    things to do in bangor maine
    Excellent Family Fun Option, The Orono Bog Boardwalk Hike.

    When is the bog open for walks, contemplation and a sense of wild wide open space?

    Closed during the winter, here are the hours of operation for the Orono Bog Boardwalk. The Orono Bog Boardwalk is roughly 1.3 miles from the Bangor Mall. It offers a variety of Maine hiking trails to explore and to keep it new and different for all ages of walkers. Fresh air, scenery and always something new to learn. Added by the friends of the Orono Bog Boardwalk. Folks and local area businesses who donate so much effort and funding to this near peat bog area of Maine.

    bog walk flowers
    The Things You Learn And See On Your Bog Walk In Penobscot County Maine.

    Frequent visits are possible because no long multi hour travel time is involved for those living in the Bangor, Brewer, Orono area of Penobscot County Maine.

    bog walk orono maine
    Over 600 Acres, So Much Effort And Funding Put Into The Orono Bog Boardwalk.

    Heading to Acadia National Park less than an hour to the south in the Bar Harbor area offers more hiking exercise if you want more.

    Have a lobster. steamed clams and a local brew while on the waterfront along the Maine coast. Baxter Park to the north is an hour away to access all the hiking trails around Mt Katahdin, Maine’s tallest mountain. Maine is outdoors. Maine is the way life should be. Hope you enjoyed this blog post sharing of our walk along the trails of the Orono Bog Boardwalk in Penobscot County.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers, ME Broker

    207.532.6573 | info@mooersrealty.com |

    MOOERS REALTY 69 North ST Houlton ME 04730 USA

  • The American Folk Festival Held In Bangor Maine End Of August Each Year.

    Bangor Maine Musicians Perform On 4 Stages By The Penobscot River.
    Bangor Maine Musicians Perform On 4 Stages By The Penobscot River.

    Warm Maine weather, wandering from outdoor stage to stage to hear the best music, continuous performances, entertainers from all over the country, world converge in Bangor ME.

    We’re talking the American Folk Festival in downtown Bangor Maine along the waterfront of the Penobscot River. This year’s musical buffet of national talent in Bangor Maine is August 27, 28, and 29. Music, song, dance, fun with folks from all over that drop a donation in the bucket to help keep this wonderful musical trek to the American Folk Festival happening. The donations keep it free admission.

    Volunteers are needed to pull of a musical operation of this size and what better way to enjoy the festival than pitching in a working on it? Maine is famous for its hard working volunteers. There is nothing stronger than the heart of a volunteer. That’s the home made flavor not store bought taste of living here in Vacationland, in Maine.

    Here is the list of muscians, dancers performing at this year’s Bangor Maine American Folk Festival. If you are traveling for the first time to Maine, here are the directions to Bangor ME.

    The music is a big draw and the diversity of performances offered, the enormous amount of talent and choices of watching a little of this cajun bayou sound, then walking over to another performance going on at the same time of gospel mixed with blues. And everything in between heard before the weekend is over for another year. But the food, the amazing array of ethnic foods, everything from around the world is represented along with a chuch’s annual bake bean, blueberry pie spread. Here is a list of American Folk Festival food vendors, crafts offered.

    Enjoy four musical stages, here’s the Bangor Maine American Folk Festival layout map.

    There are well run shuttles so park it once, hop on the bus to save leg wear and tear and make sure you spend more time in front of a Bangor Maine musical stage, less time tramping.

    Beer and wine tent, musical cd sales part of the Maine American folk festival too. Heather McCarthy, festival organizer is from my home town of Houlton Maine. Great job Heather and all the Maine support, volunteers that keep the festival lively, growing, better than after year after year.

    Chicken pickin’ music from Baileyville Maine’s Johnny Hiland is one example of a native son performing at the American Folk Festival this year too. WLBZ Channel 2 in Bangor Maine does an excellent job covering, promoting the folk festival performers with highlight stories to help draw the crowds needed to donate, fund and underwrite this amazing musical event.

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

  • At Fourteen I Was Spinning Records Working For Howdy Doody Buffalo Bob Smith.

    Four Seasons Beauty, The Major Ingredient Of What We Sell.
    Four Seasons Beauty, The Major Ingredient Of What We Sell.

    The blogs we write about Maine properties, the local community flavor, videos we shoot, edit, post in marketing real estate now started with radio.

    Broadcasting in a small market like a Houlton, Maine was a great job for a fourteen year old farm boy. The station WHOU, and two others in Calais and Millinocket Maine, were owned by early television pioneer Howdy Doody (Buffalo Bob) who had a summer place in Princeton ME.

    My job as a one-man show was do everything from spin tunes, find lost dogs and cats, take out the trash, make sure the transmitter was turned to low power during lightning, and rip/read the news, sports, weather.

    The Associated Press machine chattered and spit out the news. I always thought it odd that 99% of the news we broadcast was for starters, just read and not in the news makers own words. And two, mainly copy on events in the Maine cities and around the world. But not local. We had a station bunker bomb shelter constructed back in the cold war days. I thought if there was ever a nuclear attack at Loring Air Force Base in Limestone, no one locally would know until it came over the wire. News locally went unreported unless called in to the AP and re-routed back to the announcer. If they took the time to check the wire.

    When I entered college at the University of Maine at Orono, I landed a job at WLBZ radio 620 on outer Broadway in Bangor, Maine. Station manager Eddie Owen specifically sought employees from “The County”.

    He figured my growing up on the farm meant I knew how to work, and I liked it. He was right.

    WLBZ radio was just coming off an all-news format that had not scored well in the Bangor market Arbitron ratings. As we struggled to find a niche, a following on the return to the music dial, our news roots carried over in being more than a rip and read AP robot. Sound bites from the news makers themselves were aired. We would rewrite and edit three or four paragraphs down to two. Adding a local angle for home grown flavor and appeal, sparkle.

    We had lots of local news aired around the clock in Bangor involving all the satellite towns, making us different. We were worth listening to. Besides our setup, only newspapers and television outlets were covering the local beat. I worked throughout the year, racking up many radio hours. I also attended UMO where I earned a broadcasting degree with heavy concentration in speech, film and advertising/marketing journalism courses.

    WABI radio program director George Hale offered me more pay at a higher-rated station with the chance to get in to commercial production. I remember being the TV voice of the horse used in a series of Jack and Jean outlets around Bangor. Because channel 5 and sister country station WBGW were at the same facility, the option to learn more was all around me. The film animation courses I took at UMO came out so much more professional due to the access to editing and other enhancements at “Studio City” at 35 Hildredth Avenue near Pilot’s Grill. I was able to do every air shift. I even had to spend the night a few times. One morning, I had to open up the station for George Hale due to a major snowstorm that caused state police to order traffic off the road.

    Eventually “Humble But None The Less Mighty John Marshall” called me while I was on the air at WABI. He offered me a job to come back to a new Z-62– A rock station with many of the former employees of WGUY that had come across town to breath new life in to the old WLBZ, Then WACZ and now WZON. I spun records as Andy Powers, and news as Andrew Powers. The new last “air” name– thought up by Mighty John–was meant to impress the president of Maine Broadcasting with that also shared my new last name.

    I remember rolling in before 5 AM to get the station news ready for Mike Ohara, Tim Comer and eventually Mighty John. When news of a fire at the Greyhound bus stop and The Phoenix in downtown Bangor Maine hit the scanner after one newscast, I fired up my Pinto.

    I raced downtown with a portable cassette recorder and microphone to capture the event’s fire engine sirens, the clanging of busy fire fighters and to interview the chief.

    Later, I would learn it was an electrical fire, and two fire fighters developed smoke inhalation. A cat and a dog in an apartment had died.

    Next, it was a race back to the station–Edit the sound bite–Write the wrap around copy. You did not hear me say “Bangor Fire Chief Daigle says this or that.” I would lead in with “Bangor Fire Chief Leo Daigle” and he would say the fire started on the second floor, “When we got to the blaze, the second floor was pretty much smoke filled, and the cold temperatures hampered our efforts to get water where we wanted it.” The sound bite was blended with natural event audio that put the listener at the scene with live captured sounds. Sirens in the background, windows being cleared, broken glass sound, fire fighters shouting and the fire venting process under way.

    Barry Hobart, another Houlton boy that was the station’s sales manager, said he was stuck on the new third Bangor Brewer bridge in traffic, wondering what all the smoke was. Aerosmith’s “Walk This Way” ended and the lead in story on his radio was the Z’s Bangor Fire Chief explaining what the hub bub was… and where all that smoke was coming from that Barry was wondering about. The best compliment was when he asked how did I get down to capture it, back to edit and air in in the less than 30 minutes between newscasts? I smiled and said “I’m from the County and hustle is something you and I learned growing up”. He grinned.

    People tuned in listen to our news, even when they did not necessarily like our rock music. Our quarter hour ratings were off the scale because of this loyal “news” audience following. Our morning man Mike Ohara was from Houlton, Maine, too, just like Dale Duff, Pete Chambers, John Elliot and Mike Dow who worked the Bangor market. I also ran TV 2 camera for Eddie Driscoll and did the 6 o’clock news with Bill Green, Don Carrigan et al.

    Suddenly, I realized I loved broadcasting, but to move up the ladder meant relocating every two years to places like WPRO in Providence, Rhode Island, and WRKO in Boston. I interviewed and was to be hired for a job at a Brunswick Maine station WIGY. But I had married a Bangor lady and decided I did not want our kids to grow up in the move to eventually outside of Maine. So, I took my real estate courses in Bangor, and for the last thirty years have listed, marketed, and sold real estate in Houlton ME. The broadcasting background and education from UMO served me well as video is taking over real estate promotion.

    In 1980, the market was local. Your property buyers home grown, in the same town the property was parked. Now, the real estate playing field is worldwide. Instead of selling just the sticks and bricks, the area needs to be promoted to someone that has never been to Maine before. Local videos of sports, canoe races, local churches, the area banks, the hospital, soap box derby races all needed to be shot, edited, uploaded. I have close to 400 youtube videos and populate other sites along with posts on over 80 social media platforms we populated along with the blogs, podcasts, vidcasts. Here is a 9000 view example of the local Northern Maine Soap Box Derby Race, the largest for five years in a row in the entire nation. And here is a local hockey game video between two rival hockey teams, the Houlton Hodgdon Blackhawks and Presque Isle Wildcats. And one video showing how we sell Houlton Maine real estate.

    The best program director that I learned the most from in Radio was Mighty John Marshall. It is not cocky if you can do it with his handle “Humble But None The Less Mighty John”. He handed us a dozen-page broadcasting “bible” much of which was from WJBQ, WLOB stints, gigs he had earlier in his Maine broadcasting career. It had advice for on air…don’t complain. Never tell customers to stay off the road on their way in a snowstorm to shop with the guy who pays your salary with his ad sales campaign that is underway during your shift. Never, never have dead air. Keep the levels hot. Talk less. Know what you are going to say, and when on the hour. And play the tunes, entertain, inform.

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