Tag: maine mud season

  • Mud Season Frost Heaves Potholes In Maine

    Mud Season Frost Heaves Potholes In Maine

    Mud season, frost heaves, potholes in Maine.

    Not just the seasons of spring, summer, fall and winter in Maine.

    Don’t forget mud season. The joys of hitting potholes and coming up on a stretch of frost heaves on a Maine roadway during mud season.

    pot holes in maine
    Spring Must Be Close. The Pot Holes As Big As Your Car Prove It As Frost Leaves The Frozen Ground.

    Mud season in Maine has its own special distinction.

    Described as the 5th season in Maine to some, driving in the Pine Tree State during mud season can be treacherous.

    And exaggeration to squeeze out the humor describing mud season happens online and in your small-town daily exchange of pleasantries.

    Talking about the weather, running smelts and maple tree sap, frost heaves and potholes during mud season.

    How long Maine’s mud season last depends on a few variables.

    The size of yearly winter snow loads, the thaw and freeze temperature cycle, the spring snow melt off volume.

    ice maine winter
    Jack Frost Is Pretty Crafty. If You Leave The Maine Lake Hammock Out To Decorate.

    When snow melts and the access water seeps under a Maine road then freezes, you have frost heaves.

    Maine roadways expand upward from frozen ice expansion. The natural speed bumps can literally launch a car if an unsuspecting motorist does not adjust their speed.

    During mud season, pooling water from melting snowbanks along Maine highways when “hit” by passing traffic literally pounds the asphalt pavement to pieces.

    That constant pounding action from each passing motorist causes roadways dirt or pavement to disintegrate and open up divots.

    Those cavities fill with the same melting snow run off water. Then cycle from freeze, expand, freeze some more. To increase the size of the mud season pothole.

    Or more pleasantly referred to as a “pavement deficiency” that come in all sizes and mysterious depths.

    Some “pavement deficiencies” can cause serious damage to your vehicle.

    pot hole in maine
    Roadway Pavement Hazards In Maine, Pot Holes. Here’s One Example To Avoid Hitting With Your Car Tire.

    Mainers share stories about potholes they know about that can swallow up a car whole.

    A true native Mainer knows take it easy. They remember where the new crop of frost heaves and potholes spring up as mud season blooms.

    Who benefits from mud season and the frost heaves, potholes in Maine?

    Front end alignment specialists, the businesses selling and repairing damaged shocks, springs, tires and rims. Or the ones operating tow and ramp trucks that transport crippled cars taken out of action by frost heaves and potholes to the body repair shop.

    Native Mainers have experience with pot holes, frost heaves and mud season driving.

    Someone that’s never driven in Maine winter snow or been up to their axles in mud during spring thaw is an unsuspecting target.

    Big heavy snowplow trucks keep the Maine roadways open and safe. But the constant sliding scraping of metal plows takes it toll. Breaking away the pavement to create sink holes that fill like a freezer ice tray with water.

    ice circles maine stream
    Artistry Thanks To Mother Nature. What You See On A Walk In Maine. It’s Not Always Open Water Or Ice. There Is An In Between Season Besides The Normal Standard Set Of Four.

    How do you drive defensively and navigate around the mud season road hazards? Don’t speed up to see how big a splash you can create at that next kiddie size pool of highway water.

    It could be bottomless all the way to China. Or six week deep that when hit will jar out a few of your tooth fillings from the impact.

    Broken shocks and springs, bent rims and flat tires are all casualties of a Maine winter trying to change the slide to spring.

    Mud season is the transition tug of war that Maine motorists know all too well from years of driving practice.

    Most Maine local highway transportation departments do a good job of pounding a stake in the road shoulder. Alerting you with a bight highly visible orange “frost heave” sign of what’s ahead.

    maine winter snow photo
    Pure White, All Natural Not Man Made Snow. Maine Winter Is Coming, Locals Are Excited. Same Thing In Mud Season

    If you are new to Maine, moving here full time and have little to no experience with mud season, take note. The transition from winter snow to spring flowers is not a snap your fingers quick season transition.

    What’s a yes ma’am on a Maine roadway?

    I heard the term to represent a smaller single or series of lifts of the pavement. Caused by mud season frost action, yes ma-ams are a kinder, gentler highway experience. Unless you are going way over the speed limit, all four tires are not catapulted skyward.

    Yes Ma’am, like a small no thank you helping of frost heave. Think a small series of whopper junior moguls when downhill snow skiing. To shock absorb, slalom back and forth, side to side, up and down over them to get to the bottom base lodge for another fun run.

    How long does mud season last in Maine?

    maine canoe races in spring
    Spring Means High Fast Water, Canoe Races In Maine.

    It depends most on how much snow accumulation happened the past winter.

         I have seen mud season drag on and a tug of war between winter and spring. Or other years a ten day period and bang.

    It’s spring without a lot of fanfare or drying, thawing out happening.

    Staying Upright In A Maine Raft, In Life Situations, Relationships.
    Sometimes The “Tilt” Warning Comes On, “Service Rafter Soon” Light Glows.

    Heavy snow over a Maine winter fuels the mud season. Because the snow accumulations have to be dealt with and all that melting to water volume needs to go somewhere.

    That winter snow melting run off with spring like temperatures is what fuels our Maine spring canoe races.

    More higher water volume, faster currents to cover the rocks is what speeds up the yearly celebration. When you dig out, dust off and paddle a Maine canoe and kayak in one of Maine’s many spring river race.

    Welcome to Maine where we squeeze out the most outdoor recreation fun from every season. Even the one dubbed mud season in Maine.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers, ME Broker

    207.532.6573  |  info@mooersrealty.com  |

    MOOERS REALTY 69 North Street Houlton Maine 04730 USA

  • Mud Season In Maine

    Mud Season In Maine

    Mud season in Maine.

    It’s the in between winter and spring and can vary greatly in length. Maine’s mud season is the messy transition between bight white to the green of spring, typically from March through April, depending on the year. Snow starts to recede, dirt roads get muddy, temperatures raise the red in the glass tube during mud season.

    mud season maine
    As Maine Winter Snow Recedes And Mud Season Is Ushered In.

    The Maine weather forecast with temperatures in the 50’s and a strong sun slowly help dry things out.

    Thoughts turn to planting gardens, paddling fast moving water in spring river canoe races, puttering around your yard to fill in damage and ravage from snowplows. Changing studded snow tires back to your summer treads.

    As snow and ice melt, dirt roads, driveways, and trails can turn into oozing, sticky mud as the frost leaves the ground. Lament ready or not that downhill skiing, snowmobiling trail riding is coming to end. The sanding and salt of winter suddenly is uncovered and hits you with the urge to quickly deal with the mess.

    ice mud season maine coast

    Scrambling to remove lake ice fishing shacks and mentally rehearsing the steps to open up camp starts all over again.

    Mud season can be very short when snowfall is limited in Maine. The last two Maine winters have been light on the white stuff. Which hurts the economy that survives on healthy Maine snowfall amounts. Shaping the snow into groomed trails through the woods and down ski slopes. Plowing it, snow blowing it to keep your yard and driveway cleared and passable.

    winter wind damage in maine
    Tree Limbs Snap Off And Are Made Into Fire Wood. Clean Up As Mud Season Unfolds. Birds Visit The Outdoor “Refrigerator” For Frozen Treats. (See The Berries?)

    It can hit you as overwhelming mud season anxiety to hose down your house, wash the windows and prepare for spring.

    But whoa, slow down. The turn the corner from a Maine winter for here comes spring is a gradual transition. The clean up is going to take more than a few Saturday afternoons to accomplish.

    Everything has to thaw out, dry up first. So a homeowner realizing it’s too early for many of the getting ready for spring tasks gets centered. Picking up, collecting blown down tree limbs off your lawn. Relaying to your trash can whatever you find for treasure from a litter bug pedestrian or motorist.

    You get started tidying up but it feels like not enough time, conditions are just not right and the spring forward clock sleep change does not help your state of mind.

    Geese Come Back To Maine In Formation.
    Maine Geese, Song Birds Return To Maine During Mud Season. You Are Another Year Older. Deal With It.

    Jet lagged like and overwhelmed but coaxed into turn turn turn the season page.

    It’s just too early and another snow fall or two that will quickly dissipate is probably ahead as winter sputters to an end with a final gasp.

    Noticing, hey, the artificial tree wreath is still plugged in and on your front door. As you remove it, you see how badly weathered that original 1913 wooden door needs power washing. Then scrapping, sanding to finally apply new stain and waterproof protection. Add it to the growing long to do list.

    left over fall leaves
    Late To The Party, Last To Leave. Some Leaves, Berries On Maine Trees Linger Through Winter Into Mud Season.

    What causes mud season?

    Freeze-thaw cycles play a big role. Just like taking something out of the freezer. Warmer days melt snow, but cold nights refreeze the ground, preventing proper drainage and keeping the soil saturated. Maine’s landscape is the ugliest, starkest time. Like no make up, bed head hair and lack of sun all rolled up into one.

    maine maple syrup sap
    Maine Maple Syrup Sap Collecting, Moose Traveling Across Your Back Yard Or Back Forty.

    Waterlogged dirt roads, a common feature in rural Maine, absorb melting snow and rain, turning into mud pits with deep ruts. Heavy equipment and vehicles only make it worse, as logging trucks, farm equipment, and regular traffic churn up the roads, sometimes making them nearly impassable.

    pot holes in maine
    Spring Must Be Close. The Pot Holes As Big As Your Car Prove It. Frost Leaves The Frozen Ground And Driving Zig Zag Adds Danger To Mud Season Driving.

    Mud season affects your Maine daily life in a lot of ways.

    Travel and driving can be challenging, with rutted, slick, and sometimes impassable dirt roads. Towns often post weight limits to “ban them” to prevent further damage from heavy loads.

    Hiking and outdoor recreation take a hit as well, with trails too muddy and fragile to handle foot traffic without causing deep erosion. Farmers face delays because their fields are too wet to work in, pushing back planting and preparation.

    maine maple syrup producing
    See The Maple Tree Sap Buckets? Maple Sugar Shack Sap Production In Maine Woods. It Happens During Mud Season.

    Many farm fields “warm up slowly” and due to snowfall run off accumulation amounts and poorly drained soil types, it requires planning.

    To know where to start preparing the farm ground field acreage to avoid more down time pulling out axle mired mud stuck farm machinery.

    Meanwhile, mud creeps into driveways, yards, and Maine homes, while sump pumps work overtime to handle basement flooding. Make sure your sump pump is plugged in, they work better that way. When outside your foundation ground is frozen, during the spring thaw ground water has no other place to go.

    winter mud season maine
    Winter “MOOves” Over During Mud Season Melt For Approaching Spring Green Pasture Grass.

    But to fill your cellar if no proper drainage or you plowed your snow four feet high up against your house.

    There is a trick to plowing snow in Maine.

    Furnace oil burners that go under the ground water in your house cellar are a big concern. Especially for any Maine snowbirds who run away winters to the sunny south or traveling out west. A Maine house sitter quickly knows when the inside house temperature starts to drop from a furnace that fails to do its job.

    That someone’s home noticing “I can see my breath in the kitchen” is an asset. They let you know, they call the heating oil dealer to let them know we’re out, bone dry in the 275 gallon tank. Sometimes the automatic fill up heating degree days time to fill up calculations get messed up, it happens.

    canoe race maine river
    Paddling A Larger Faster Swollen Ice Cold Maine River. Some Want To Win, Others Take Their Time To Enjoy The Free Ride Using The Current.

    Empty houses in Maine over the winter that are heated but not monitored closely can rack up costly freeze up damage from broken pipes and running water. Despite all the challenges, the desire to spring clean and tackle yard work is strong. Mainers are not lazy, and after months of winter, the pent-up energy to get outside and start working is undeniable.

    But frustration kicks in when the reality of mud season forces patience. The ground needs time to dry out, the frost has to leave, and things just don’t happen as fast as people want them to. It’s a time when “easy does it” and “all in good time” become necessary reminders, even if they’re not what anyone wants to hear.

    maine ice out
    Maine Lake Ice Thins Slowly. Get Those Ice Shacks Off In March Before You Lose Them!

    To survive mud season, Mainers adapt.

    Driving requires caution—avoiding dirt roads when possible, sticking to the middle where the ground is firmer, and being prepared for the possibility of getting stuck.

    Walking means look for bald spots, sidewalks and trail sections that are clear and melted. Or stretches of solid ice that could lead to a broken limb or sprain happen so you get over in the snow bank or straddle the edge of something crusty, rough and safer to navigate on than smooth polished glare ice.

    maine lake otters
    What Shows Up Out Front Your Maine Lake Home. Watch Video For This Pair That Popped Up At 5AM Coffee Time.

    Proper gear is essential like all the seasons in Maine. Rubber boots, extra shoes in the car, and gravel or wood planks by doorways to help keep mud out of the house. Setting up the orange pylons or grade stakes with brightly colored surveyors tape or nylon rope to try to keep people, motor traffic off your lawn.

    The same temporary danger warning to avoid potholes or what is now PC called “pavement deficiencies”.

    Those highway cracks and crevices can knock a car’s front end out of alignment or an accident trying to avoid them or at night when they blend in and are harder to see.

    Frost heaves, natural speed bumps force motorists to slow down and like clock work, they appear in the same spots year after year. Frost heaves get your attention and train you to ease off the throttle as everything in your car and truck including your and passengers goes up and down with a thud.

    sunrise on a maine lake during mudseason
    Early Morning Sunrise On A Maine Lake Losing It’s Ice During Mud Season.

    Protecting the Maine home and yard means using mats inside and outside doors, spreading sand or crushed rock on driveways for traction. Resisting the urge to start yard work too soon to avoid damaging the still-thawing ground. Many of the rolled up lawn sod clods are frozen in place.

    You can try to shred them and replant or put them back to where they used to be before the yellow Fisher  snow plow gave them a new home.

    Take off your shoes, wipe your feet and paws and try to keep the fine dust and dirt outside of your Maine home.

    While mud season is a hassle, it’s also a sign that spring is on its way. Sugar shacks are boiling down maple syrup sap, birds are returning, the sun increases strength under its natural heat lamp.

    open water maine lake
    Mist, Open Water On A Maine Lake.

    Soon enough, the snow with rain, wind and warmer temperatures will disappear like Frosty. Maine land will dry out and everything will turn green again. As Mainers say, “If you can survive a Maine winter or mud season, you can survive anything.”

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers, ME Broker

    207.532.6573  |   info@mooersrealty.com   |

    MOOERS REALTY 69 North ST Houlton Maine 04730 USA