Tag: growing up in maine

  • Exploring My Area Of Maine On A Minibike Growing Up

    Exploring My Area Of Maine On A Minibike Growing Up

    Growing up in Maine, did you have a minibike?

    My first minibike was a 3.5 horsepower Briggs and Stratton model. Just a simple, low-cost minibike that was dark green with knobby tires.

    It has a thick long cushion seat to make up for a serious lack of suspension. No gears, the minibike equipped with a centrifugal clutch. Just twist the throttle and away you go.

    Straight gas, nothing to mix and fun to ride minibike to explore the area when farm chores, schoolwork were completed.

    sears minibike
    Simple, Affordable Minibike

    I would ride the minibike around my Maine family farm field roads, woods trails and in the beginning stayed pretty close to home.

    I was nine years old. My Dad has picked up the minibike I earned with potato picking money at the Sear store in Presque Isle Maine.

    Riding the minibike around the farm was fun. But eventually longer excursions to my Aunt Ruth’s farm on the Callaghan Road was a frequent destination. Aunt Ruth lived with Freeman Taylor and ran a horse-riding summer camp.

    Camp Little Ponderosa was just a couple miles away by car.

    On the minibike, it was about three miles going up and over the Interstate 95 overpass on the Mooers Road.

    mooers farm houlton maine
    Mooers Family Farm Houlton Maine

    Then crossing the Ludlow Road near my Uncle Fred and Molly’s farm.

    Then after looking both ways, zig-zagging to taking a trail through farm fields and tree plantation up through a horse back or esker of gravel deposits on Holland Taylor’s farm. Always, always wearing a helmet.

    It was the same route used on the family snowmobile in the winter months, a blue 12.8 horsepower Sno Jet.

    The trail just covered with white fluffy snow and I was dressed more warmly with layers.

    On minibike or snowmobile, you ended up in the same place. The Lane gravel pit which was just behind, to the east of my Aunt Ruth’s summer horse riding camp.

    I put a straight pipe on the minibike engine that was anything but high performance.

    Only so much you could do to squeeze a little more speed out of the engine usually used on lawnmowers not a motor bike.

    High test gas, experimenting with a different chain sprocket configuration all slightly modified the first minibike.

    My neighbors Chris and Bryon Williams had minibikes too. Blue 4 horsepower Bonanza minibike models, a pair of them.

    We would ride down the Hagan Road to farm roads that led to Cary Mills .

    Over toward the town dump and Donald Guy’s gravel pit. Mostly dirt roads and staying off paved ones where traffic was a danger. And knowing we were not licensed motorcyclists yet and way too young to take the road test.

    The minibike was freedom.

    It was fun to have the privilege to ride with my friends and go places without mom and dad carting me around here and there.  The minibike provided a variation of the same feeling of independence that I got riding the snowmobile with my countryside neighborhood friends.

    It was not all gas-powered transportation either growing up in rural Maine. Summer meant going up into Market Square peddling a three-speed banana bike. The same feeling of independence provided weekly riding my bike with the long leopard seat into 5 Franklin Avenue to mow lawns.

    The money-making gig grass clipping summer job passed down by my brother Brian.

    It paid a whopping five dollars and a included an icy cold can of White Rock black raspberry soda a week. Money carefully managed from farm jobs, birthdays, Christmas gifts, mowing lawns was funneled into the minibike fund.

    Helmets, repairs and modifications nibbled at the hard-earned fund that led to bigger and better. Eventually trading in the Sears minibike for one purchased at Tingley Brother’s Garage on the North Road or US RT 1 in Houlton Maine.

    The orange Chibi was a serious step up for a mini bike.

    chibi rockford minibike
    3 Speeds, 58cc 2 Cycle Engine Powered The Chibi Minibike

    It was really a miniature dirt bike with three speeds, a manual clutch, and tuned exhaust on the 2-cycle mixed oil 58cc Rockwell Industries engine.

    The Chibi made by Bridgestone came in two models. For $285 you could but a basic blue model. For $315 you could get a snazzy orange Mopar color paint job scheme and a headlamp, taillight.  This helped extend the range of the trips and when I had to be home.

    Our parents allowed a group of us kids to take our minibikes to camp out with sleeping bags overnight. Looking back, I really appreciated the freedom I had growing up on a Maine farm. My parents trusted me to make good decisions and had loosened up over the years raising me and my three older brothers.

    Fast forward to my own children.

    Put on a helmet, tighten it up the chin strap. They started out with four red and white Honda minibikes that were three speeds with a clutch, around 50cc power plants.

    I could not find a local outlet to purchase them so went across the border to Dave’s Sport Center in Woodstock New Brunswick Canada. The duty was 28 dollars for the Honda’s from Japan.

    Then the growing kids graduated to four dark blue Yamaha 125 cc four-cycle off-road motorbikes. Taller, more bike for bigger trail riders. You could add a light kid and make them legally road worthy.

    I know how much I appreciated having the freedom to trail ride growing up and the ability to explore with friends and on my own.

    What is it like around you? The minibike was my ticket to find out growing up on a Maine family farm.

    Did you have a minibike growing up? What kind, what was the experience like? Were you trusted by your parents to leave the yard and did you have earned freedom that looking back you really appreciate now?

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers, ME Broker

    207.532.6573  |  info@mooersrealty.com   | 

     MOOERS REALTY 69 North ST Houlton ME 04730

  • Maine Made Christmas Presents

    Maine Made Christmas Presents

    Maine made Christmas presents.

    Something not from across the pond or with a “made in China” sticker on the bottom. Low tech not high tech and made in Maine. When you think something unique to Maine, what comes to mind? Christmas tree or wreath to be part of your holiday tradition? Or presents with something from LL Bean? Maybe a wild Maine blueberry scented candle or pie or jar of jam?

    Maine is famous for it’s lobsters, variety of fish from pulled in from deep in the sea.

    maine fresh seafood
    The Only Fish Fresher Is Still Swimming In The Maine Sea!

     

    With all this coastline, 228 miles but 3,478 miles of inlets, coves, harbors and other watery hide aways, Maine fresh shellfish is part of a lot of Christmas celebrations.

    Growing up oyster stew, shrimp cocktail or crab melts all showed up on the Christmas Day or Eve tradition. If you were born and raised along the coast of Maine, seafood of all types could be a regular meal time staple. Digging for clams, shucking oysters, cracking lobster legs and filet of all kinds of native fish.

    Chances are someone you are related to has a commercial fishing license or back in the family tree did.

    Or you run a boat heading out to sea and are born for the salt air and sea swells as you head out of the harbor in search of a big catch.

    barnacle billys
    Fish Fresh From The Maine Coastal Sea. Barnacle Billy’s Crew Ham It Up For Tourists. The Maine Coast Has Lots Of Seafood Eateries.

    Further inland, up into the belly of Maine and away from Boston, traveling to interior Maine. The holiday meal time Christmas celebration is pulled from old tattered and fade recipe cars. Gooseberry and mince meat pies. After hearty farmstead country style servings of vegetables of all kinds.

    Venison from hunting season and pulling from root cellars for bread and butter pickles.

    Deviled eggs, sticky sweet cinnamon buns and trays of home made sweets. Thinking about losing weight? Not during the holiday season in Maine. The feast is part of the one size fits all Christmas present the entire family enjoys. The big fat evergreen fir or pine tree in the living room corner is loaded down too. With fragile, precious decorations from Christmas past.

    ice circles maine stream
    Artistry Thanks To Mother Nature. What You See On A Walk In Maine Over The Holidays In A Maine Peaceful Winter.

    Photos of your brother or sister glued behind colored construction paper hanging on the boughs with multi color twinkling lights.

    The power of a Christmas tree ornament you inherited from the growing up collection is immense. Memories and reminders of family members are spiked from these tree decorations enjoyed as a child. Throwing money at new flashy decorations is not needed when you hang on to and cherish these Christmas family ornaments.

    This year’s tree hunted down, cut fresh and straight from your own land out behind your house.

    maine winter snow photo
    Maine Is Real, Peaceful, Not Crowded. Winter Is Peaceful, Time To Hunker Down.

    Christmas of yesteryear in rural Maine was not determined by how far into debt you went to pull it off on December 25th.

    Home made hand knit mittens, sweaters, scarves. Carefully stitched quilted blankets worked on earlier in the year completed just in time to wrap up and slide under the family Christmas tree.

    Practical gifts purchased with lots of thought because you remember the family member saying they wished they had this or that item. Money manged better when less of it to spend. Because of how hard it was to earn and save.

    Thought and time put into what paper to use wrapping the gift up not parked by the tree in a gift bag with only tissue paper concealing it.

    And the stockings as big a deal as the presents carefully wrap, ribbon and bowed under the Maine Christmas tree. Did you start first with the Christmas stockings?

    How do you start the opening up of the wrapped presents in your home growing up? Free for all every man for himself? Or oldest or youngest goes first and then rotate around the room? Waiting for the grandparents to arrive and quite a breakfast spread served up first? Growing up in Maine…

    Did you leave cookies and milk, a carrot for Santa?

    Elf on a shelf and family parties, watching the same old Christmas films? Was there a Christmas Eve service in your holiday celebration? When did you stop traveling and started having Christmas celebrations in your own home? It is all about having yourself a Merry little Christmas with the ones you love.

    Enjoying the child made gifts from school. Remembering when who made them had  that small of hands and was lower to the ground. Home made items, decorations hand strung, Christmas cards taped around a doorway, putting on a feast of sweets and no one possibly able to go hungry.

    A lot of the Christmas celebration one of gratitude like the Merle Haggard song “If we make it through December”.

     

    Knowing despite it all, you and I are luckier than most.

    Reaching out to help ringing the Salvation Army kettle bell. Knowing what families or individuals are suffering this holiday season. Doing anything possible to make things brighter for them. No doubt you know of some family where Christmas is not going to be so easy this season because of a loss. The hole, the missing family member that won’t be part of the Christmas celebration.

    Delivering a cut, split cord of wood to help with the heat.

    The Amish in my area have every Thursday designated as community day. Taking turns delivering the labor, materials and services needed to keep every household a float. Not a check from Uncle Sam for relief. A helping hand and a strong back the Christmas gift given all year long. Not just at the tail end of days marked on the kitchen wall calendar.

    Getting off the couch, replacing feeling sorry for yourself with fresh air, outdoor scenery going for a walk in the woods. You never know what you will find hidden in the back forty acres of a Maine farm property.

    maine woods
    Treasure In The Woods Getting Your Firewood To Heat Your Home! Old Cars Past Their Prime. Hanging Around For Hunters, Hikers, Land Brokers To Visit.

    Maine made gifts for Christmas.

    What items did you shop for on your list this year? Books, magazine subscriptions, movie tickets, museum passes and donations to local libraries, the animal shelters, food pantries. Know anyone in your community that needs a warm winter coat? That has no winter boats, hat, scarf and mittens or gloves? There are so many private ways to brighten someone else’s Christmas to secondary gain your own.

    Thank you for following our Me In Maine blog posts through out the year and Merry Christmas, Happy New Year!

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers, ME Broker

    207.532.6573 |  info@mooersrealty.com  

    MOOERS REALTY 69 North ST Houlton ME 04730 USA

     

  • Growing Up In Maine, Earliest Childhood Memories.

    Growing Up In Maine, Earliest Childhood Memories.

    Growing up In Maine. Earliest memories living in small town rural Maine.

    The youngest you were where you can remember vividly. How old were you when events happening around you can be recalled from memory? And not thanks to a relative making it seem real. But recalled on your own without help from the family story telling of a personal event. I can remember living on Franklin Avenue in Houlton Maine. We were only there a couple year before moving to a farm property outside of town.

    More Open Space, Less People, No Traffic, No Crime. That’s Maine. Is It Like That Where You Hang Your Hat Now?

    I was two to three years of age according to my quick ciphering calculations.

    The family still living downtown. There must have been a party the night before. It is just me shuffling around at about 5 AM. Slowly climbing out of bed, sliding down the carpeted stairs on my stomach to hang a right at the bottom. To visit the brightly lit living room.

    The sun on the eastern exposure windows pouring, shining in very brightly. Just waking up and being in the dark for quite a few hours sleeping probably added to how daylight intense it was to a little shaver. With sleepy seeds from the Sandman’s handiwork the night before still crusted in the big brown peepers.

    Wearing a one piece zip ’em up sleeper with the built in vinyl coated slipper feet.

    Moving like a low to the ground cat burglar that knew his way around the quiet as a mouse single family homestead. The warm insulated sleeper probably from JC Penney’s or Chain Apparel. There were potato chips in the bowl on the living room coffee table. The familiar big glass snack container had a wire bracket hooked to the top side of the super sized bowl. To allow the dip to hang out near the chips. It was onion dip’s turn to entertain hungry guests at the house party.

    Aroostook County’s Oldest Town, Houlton Maine.

    Thinking back it was out of character for my mom not to have cleaned up the dishes after the night of the party or when a meal was done. With the help of the family recruited to remind all that many hands made light work.

    So somewhere around two plus years of age and was MIA in the crib upstairs this particular Saturday or Sunday morning when the Maine house was dead quiet.

    Like home alone after everyone gets shuttled hurriedly to the airport. No noise because it was a tad early. All the rest of the family members had not done the rise and shine, get your head out of bed.

    Another vivid earliest of memories was the actual move to the farm from Franklin Avenue. Passengers in an International pick up, the back end loaded up with household belongings from in town destined for the country relocation. I am in my Mom’s lap, Dad is driving slowly. As we round the corner beyond the cemetery on both sides of the road and the farm comes into view. The memory moment in time is crystal clear. Nothing faded or hazy about it in the memory banks mental scan.

    Our family pitch black cat Satan, a Tom with plumbing kept intact for life is none to happy about being in the truck cab. Pacing, crying, anxious and not the best of passengers. At fourteen years of age after keeping the farmstead free of other cats and any rodents, Dr Perkins on Court Street was summoned to put the family pet to sleep. No easy task. But that event to come later. Way way beyond moving day from town to country for “Satie”.

    Satan was not the most social feline but a better mouser there was not to be seen for miles around.

    He would disappear one week a year. Head to town or somewhere he did not share with us. And to come back in one major mess. Cuts, scrapes, bruises. Torn ears, chipped teeth, looking like one of the Rolling Stones after being out on tour way too long. He would be nursed back to health. To land back on his four feet. Returned to the barnyard daily routine and sobering up from doing what Tom cats do. Flirting, competing for an intown female cat’s affections. When off duty, on R & R from protecting the grainary, performing the other agricultural barn yard list of chores. Everyone works on a Maine family farm remember? Satan knew his special role.

    Back back to the move, the window in the back of the pick up is sideways oval. Looking back through the truck cab’s window I can see a tall floor lamp loose and swaying. Wondering to myself just how much that beige colored shade could take in the breeze of the transport. Ease up on the pedal to the metal Dad suggests Mary Lou aka Mom.

    The recall of the move was not because my parents supplied the detail. It was my own you are there observation. The parents are both gone now and not available to ask for more details. Like where were my three older brothers? Back packing or tractor beamed behind us with more cargo?

    The sense of smell is supposed to be the strongest to kick start memory recall of an earlier time in your life.

    Walking into a farm barn and the smell of hay or manure or grain, the livestock can take you instantly to that familiar setting in rural Maine. Being in the Maine woods “uptah camp” or hiking a trail can surround you the same way with rich forest smells of recall. Fresh rain early in the day. Everything is alive and vibrant. Welcome to Maine, the way life should be.

    No Two Are The Same. Because Everyday You Are Not The Same. Maine Sunrises, Sunsets Collected On A Crystal Clean Maine Lake Setting. Feeling Blessed.

    Little ice shards stuck like jewel crystals to wool mittens knit by your mom or grandmother. Those have smells from your winter outdoor playing in the snow that trigger the olfactory sense too. The hand made pearl one knit two home made patterned mittens that matched your winter coat. Removed, heavy, wet and smelling like damp sheep. Carefully placed on a wooden rack by the kitchen wood stove to dry out completely for another day of play. Every day, any season, Mainers are outdoors any chance they get. We all suffer from cabin fever if we don’t fill our lungs with fresh clean Maine air.

    Landing on the moon for someone younger than myself was the earliest of memories for a friend of mine.

    He figured he was around two at the time and remembers asking his mom why is everything white on the moon from afar? Her answer to her son was because the trees are white, mountains and craters are too.

    Total white on white washing to sterilize the lunar moon scenery. The take away logic was that everything on the moon must be a million shades of white only white. And boy could this new destination in the all important race to the moon location ever use a Sherwin Williams paint outlet his thought. For the blues, greens of Maine, fall orange, red, yellows and all the other color wheel shades needed to shake it up a bit.

    Snow Covered, Moon Lit Small Maine Town Courthouse. The Shiretown Of Aroostook Is Border Town Of Houlton ME.

    Everyone asks who are these people in the old black and white snap shot photos.

    The ones safely touch away in a hidden protected box.

    Even when family members all try their best to write on the back who their relatives are or to indicate the year they were captured. When the people who were there suddenly are not, everything goes fuzzy.

    But for most of us, the earliest memories of living in Maine are collected on our own very early.

    Combined with the ones we overheard shared at family reunions. Or from the regular Sunday after church rotations to someone’s house that was the pick of venues for this week. To spend the afternoon with aunts, uncles, cousins.

    The grown ups sat and talked. The kids played outdoor games and used their imaginations in fresh air exercise. We grew up in Maine taking turns visiting our relative’s homes. Each week it was fun because it was new and different than our own regular surroundings.. You did get a glimpse of how the other family members lived because of they weekly gatherings.

    Other early memories on the Maine farm?

    Complaining my bike with the training wheels was not fast enough. So my older brother Jonathan hooks up a rope, connected to his English racer bike and I went lots faster. For awhile. Until hitting one of the very tall and thick maple shade trees out front of the country home on the County Road.

    Still wear the large scar under the chin from that adventure. My grandmother was a nurse and probably should have had the gash stitched up but did not get sewed up because she must have triaged the wound as just a scrape. Nothing serious Mary Lou. Have him hold this peeled potato on it for a spell and he will be fine.

    Early Andrew Mooers. Snacking On A Graham Cracker On Franklin Ave Houlton ME Neighbor Home Of Ralph And Marjorie Black.

    What’s your earliest memory that is crystal clear as a bell?

    Did you have grandparents in Maine that you visited summers as a kid? Have fond memories of life on the rural farm? Or trips to the coast, were those in the mental slide show?

    Wells Beach perhaps or hiking trips to Mt Katahdin? Or renting a lake camp for a week in Maine growing up? Visiting LL Bean or Old Orchard Beach?

    Maybe your family rented a cottage on the Maine coast. Or liked camping in the Great North Woods. Ever paddled the Allagash Wilderness Waterway?

    Been to Vanceboro or Escourt Station or The Forks, Jackman, St Agatha Maine? Feeling pretty lucky to have be raised here, not just sample the state a long weekend here, a vacation stretch of days there. Live and local and a full blown native is a special inner feeling and very grateful for my roots and heritage.

    Maine, she’s a big part of a lot of fond memories whether you live here full time or not.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers, ME Broker

    207.532.6573 | info@mooersrealty.com |

    MOOERS REALTY 69 North ST Houlton ME 04730 USA

  • Maine | Keep A Child’s Heart With A Grown Ups Head.

    Simple, single minded, affectionate and teachable … you and I were all kids once and hopefully still are in
    Kids Raised In Maine Do Well Because The Right Ingredients Go In Bring Them Up.
    Maine Is The Place To Raise Kids, A Family Because We Keep It Real, Simple.
    some ways in your heart.

    A child’s imagination has no limits, no concerns about mortgage payments, whether the car’s oil is overdue for a change. The little details that can clutter and detract from a person’s quality of life is not a concern to a young child.

    Have fun, be kind and considerate and sensitive to others are qualities most young kids have unless spoiled, taught otherwise. As a parent, backing off and watching kids work out a problem on their own is a powerful experience. They have much more natural goodness inherit in them than we often realize until put to the test. Kids are very resilient and ones raised in Maine deserve more credit because not just the parents are involved in shaping them for the real world.

    Picked up the youngest child Elliot at the Portland Maine jet port last night and back home to help pack the Honda to get him to his summer job today.

    Leading groups rafting the Dead River and living at the Sterling Inn is his employment experience until heading back to Colorado Springs for his final year of college next fall. His older brother Alex is off on his own after college graduation. Also rafting for a job on the Arkansas and Colorado Rivers until Arapahoe A Basin ski area opens up again this winter.

    The youngest daughter Amanda lives in Boston. The oldest sister Elizabeth in New York City and off to Costa Rica for a few months to immerse in Spanish to become more fluent to tie in with her job, continuing education pursuits. I’m proud of graduated step daughters Keegan and Lindsay’s accomplishments who live in Maine too. That all six grew up in Maine. Learning from picking potatoes, having lots of folks in the village besides just family help shape them. To pitch in, aid to define their purpose, talents, skills for life survival. They are all good kids that are grown up but hopefully keep that youthful, child like spirit needed to have quality of life, joy, happiness, contentment.

    Elliot is a thinker, philosopher and tender hearted. Conversations with just he and I are always spirited, engaging, flushing out lots of wisdom to chew on. His grandparents helped all the kids see the bigger picture in life. To enjoy, glean and enjoy the ride of life’s short journey. They helped add so much to all the kid’s childhoods to prepare them for their lives. And I have no doubt all the kids will be good parents someday and help shape their young minds in the same manner.

    Elliot said you could tell on the flight back from Colorado when you were getting closer to Maine.

    The last “puddle jumper” smaller plane from Philadelphia to Portland had more animated people on board. Friendlier, chatting it up. He said he always feels the cabin of passengers on that last smaller plane is more at ease. Opening up and not so too into themselves self contained or rushed. Like the larger airport ticket holders become that are used to a fast pace, crime, being rushed to and fro with such a sense of urgency or impersonal disregard to others around them.

    I told him that is why I wanted the kids to be raised in Maine. People wave, hold doors open, make eye contact, pitch in volunteering in their local small town proud communities. They care about others and are not so self contained. Not just out to take care of number one. No matter what the expense. Mainers are God fearing, respectful, hard working and aware how important keeping it simple is. That outdoor natural living is part of the spiritual experience of worship. Where you get answers to twists and turns, rises and dips in the road of life along the way.

    Money in Maine is not used to impress.

    Maine is not a state flush with cash anyway. Swanky, costly purchases or extravagant maneuvers to call attention to yourself is not the insecure game of keeping up with the Jones. Or trying to set the pace, to be the Jones in Maine. If a person needs to be center spotlight important and noticed, they quickly move away to the bright lights, big city. C.S. Lewis was right. Too much pride in life is a bad thing. Because a real Mainer is less showy, more behind the scenes doing the right thing for others. Without need to have anyone know the act of kindness. The concern for others less fortunate or just needing a friend. Someone to listen. To be there when they are struggling, confused, sick, or just lonesome.

    A real Mainer is more aware and strives to keep their life simple. The ornaments that some collect to define themselves materially are stripped away. Replaced with natural gems of our many lakes, rivers, miles of rugged rock bound sea coast line where the real value of life is found. Maine is outdoors all four seasons.

    I am proud of all the kids I was lucky to be able to help guide, educate, enjoy for the brief stint they are small, growing up, under the same roof. You have to let them go and start their lives. And at the same time, have lots of freed up opportunities alone to add to my own new life adventures. With all that Maine and her outdoor drop dead natural beauty provides. I am so lucky to live in Maine full time. And not have to settle for one or maybe two weeks a year like out of staters have to get by with on just vacation visits. Maine, don’t stay away too long.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers, ME Broker

    207.532.6573
    info@mooersrealty.com

  • The Childhoods Of Four Maine Boys Contained In An Antique Open Front Writing Desk.

    Collecting Memorable Events In A Family, Storing Them In A Writing Desk
    Every Mom, Lady In Her 80’s It Seems Has A Writing Desk For Family History

    If you still have both your parents, enjoy them but my Maine Mom and Dad are now in my memory and heart only.

    I miss them being here on Earth. But they both prepared the four boys in their family for the acceptance of death as a part of life. I still feel their presence, the life lessons and values they both worked hard to instill in their boys.

    When you live geographically close to your parents, and your kids, their grandchildren see them nearly daily, their absence hits deeper.

    Their passing is noticed more than when once, twice if you are lucky the same parents get together with their grown kids now moved many states away. I think that is the way it goes for many. Because of more local involvement in your day to day life as the family grows older together.

    Sharing Maine holidays that come and go. School plays, sports games and graduation to the next life level happens with a blur. Right on schedule. The parents are around for it all, you do lots together. Whether attending a Maine church supper where the food is always like the best world class five star dining establishment. Being there with them as parts wear out, the other end of age plays out. Life’s tail end involving flights of stairs up and down during brief stays at a local Maine hospital.

    But no nursing homes, no prolong life ending illnesses or conditions for either for which the four boys are very grateful.

    And so much rich experiences, adventures really that the pair took, exposed their family to together. With love, care and attention. It’s not their death that glorifies or history that makes them bigger than life. It’s simple love, kindness, care and attention as their kids, grandchildren were taught practical life lessons.

    Healthy ways to look at situations we find ourselves in. How it is not about just us. But to always consider, factor in others. The greater good of many and not just ourselves to take care of, please. To have a life with purpose, to contribute to your local community for the sheer joy of helping out, pitching in. But most importantly, how to be happy, content, grateful.

    No one likes a lazy whiner.

    Hanging around the water cooler attitudes, complaining when you have work to do. To get yourself out of the mud you put yourself in. Responsibility for your role in difficult situations. Relationships that are delicate and that family is everything drilled in to us as a given. Not a choice. It all meant respect for others, their opinions. And extreme care to maintain delicate family relationships so damage was avoided, to side step the need for repair process altogether.

    In settling the last to go, Mom’s estate, nothing hit me harder, deeper of her sense of family then sorting through what lay in her antique, open front writing desk.

    Every woman now in her 80’s seems to own one.

    In my travels as a Maine real estate broker, I see them in every living room or den. Carbon copy solid pieces of furniture. And inside are the contents of the family journey. Tucked away in special pull out compartments for safe keeping.

    Report cards of myself, my brothers and all the rest of the memorabilia of growing up appear as the desk lid is opened, lowered. Newspaper clippings yellowing but scissored out because one of us was mentioned, or the center of the local story. Loose green stamps that were waiting, collected for the next book used to help buy sporting goods, camping gear. Awards, certificates, a Bible, yarn for mittens and scarves, all safely stored inside that writing desk that had a lock. But never was.

    Like a family time capsule, recording we all really lived here on Earth, raised on a Maine potato farm where the entire family worked. Plenty of Maine land with lots of trailer trucks out back behind the barn to haul the spuds to market. Black and white pictures capturing it all. Carefully labeled on the back to pass on who this is and where it was taken. For the next generation. Merry Christmas Mom, Dad, family and friends.

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

  • Building A Better Truck To Haul Maine Potatoes To Market.

    Curosity, What Makes Something Work.
    What Is That, What Do You Have There?

    If you worked at an over the road big truck company, building a better vehicle that sold more units would be the goal.

    To get that better truck designed, built you had best be very curious. Asking the truck drivers who live in those 18 wheelers what they like.

    What they don’t.

    About the rig they drive, that others use. And learn what they have experienced or heard at truck stops about the pros and cons of all flavors. 10-4?

    Even if you had engineers from the best college schools in the land back east working for you, have to still tap in to the guy or gal behind the wheel racking up those millons of miles. Those truck drivers with the chain drive wallets are the real research and development crew. They live in that home away from home on wheels for weeks, years at a time.

    My dad was a Maine potato farmer for twenty four years. In addition to growing spuds, he was a broker for them.

    Buying Maine potato loads to get to the Boston, Hartford, New York produce markets for the most part.

    He had ICC comodity rights for hauling back loads of paper products. Usually the back haul was a load of french fry cartons.

    My brother Brian, other brothers and myself would take truck trips. We had fun going to the big city, riding shot gun in the cab overs my Dad bought. Helping the truck drivers unload. Having a bag of potatoes left over to trade for fresh off the Florida tree grapefruits or oranges.

    The first trailer truck bought after the Maine railroad started loosing loads to over night efficiency was a 1963 White cab over 250 Cummins diesel single screw with a tag axle.

    And the first trailer a Fruehauf 1957 box. My parents eventually had eight trucks parked out behind our Maine farm barn that became a truck terminal.

    Have two brothers that ended up engineers. But the mechanical one was my Brother Brian. He would designed truck after truck in his bedroom. Dad and Mom had a desk built just for drafting. Brian drews cars too. Very detailed, very well.

    He worked his way up through the ranks of Freightliner and married a lady from Portland Oregon. And when he became plant manager, he also had experience with designing a new series.

    To get the best Freightliner built, he sent the engineers who thought they could design anything out on the highway with coast to coast truckers.

    To take off their white shirt and tie and live like, think like a trucker.

    Those engineers designing the new series truck came back with tons of information. Complaints from some drivers of older models that their back and kidneys hurt due to the seat suspension. Others complained how hard it was to change a truck electrical fuse. Or reach way over to change a station on the radio without nearly a jack knife accident happening.

    But also a long list of what the drivers liked about their current truck were gleaned, gathered and factored in to the design of the new class eight truck line. The engineering is key. But the guys and gals working on this module, that system have to communicate too. The truck does not just go together the most efficient, ergonomic way without study, timing, discussion.

    I’m am glad my parents ran lots of businesses and exposed the four boys to many endeavors.

    It was not just a childhood of one type of living or career and we all became more well rounded because of it.

    One brother went in to truck design because Dad and Mom had Whites, International Transtar and a Peterbilt.

    Another went in to civil engineering because of my parents building a new centralize packing potato shed.

    I got exposed to Maine real estate due to my parents working in that and the property appraisal field.

    I was lucky to have hard working, creative parents that exposed us to a very education childhood in Maine.

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