Tag: maine potato picking

  • Picking Potatoes On A Northern Maine Aroostook County Farm

    Picking Potatoes On A Northern Maine Aroostook County Farm

    One spud, two spuds, picking potatoes on a Northern Maine Aroostook County farm.

    Was it hard for kids to head out into the early morning darkness to the Maine potato farm field? What work ethic lessons were learned for youth relied on to get the potatoes basket picked, poured into barrels, trucked from the Maine farm field for winter storage?

    kids picking maine potatoes
    One Basket At A Time! Picking Maine Potatoes A Skill Learned By The Lucky Youth Growing Up In A Fall Harvest Potato Farm Field.

    Have you ever picked potatoes along with your family and friends to earn money for school clothing?

    The valuable list of skills and attitudes learned picking Northern Maine potatoes.

    Toiling in the farm field under all kinds of weather over school harvest recess is a worthwhile entry level job. But from the outside looking in, today’s youth and parents not exposed to the fall harvest potato picking tradition, it is easy to overlook the learning experience.

    So what was it like and why were area Maine youth relied on as an vital component for the fall harvest of potatoes?

    My Dad and mom, northern Maine potato farmers said kids did a better job handling the potato harvest picking the crop. Less damage to the valuable farm field potato harvest crop than from fast moving mechanized machinery like harvesters caused. Better for Mother Nature too with less erosion from air harvesters harnessing kid power to pick this year’s crop.

    Your family household goes to bed the night before to prepare for the early rise and shine during potato harvest.

    By 5AM, you are finishing  a hearty breakfast for the day ahead in the Maine potato farm field.

    picnics picking potatoes with maine fall colors scenery
    Picnic Food Just Tastes Better Looking At This When Munching What Gets Fished Out Of The Basket. Potato Pickers Move Field To Field In Fall Harvest Colors.

    The fresh air during fall potato harvest improves the taste of your lunch, all the the snacks. What you munched on carefully packed to lug to the field.

    Along with your water jug, extra warm clothes, back up pairs of fresh brown jersey work gloves.

    You learned early to be careful with your lunch box, extra clothes, water jug to keep them from being run over by the barrel truck.

    The Maine area potato farmer that hired you for the fall harvest will be at your address with a covered pickup soon.

    Barely sunrise, rounding up and delivering the young potato pickers to the new field to dig today. Or to finish up the one from yesterday that was not completed due to sheer size, too much rain, frost or or mechanical breakdowns. You arrive in the field layered with long underwear, extra clothing layers because you can see your breath in the crisp, frosty early morning air.

    One by one you hop out of the back of a pickup or van used to collect your fellow potato pickers for this year’s harvest.

    Before heading to your “section” in the row after row of un-earthed, not dug potato field, your field boss hands you a fresh pack of tickets. You have an assigned number, usually 50 up to 100 tickets wrapped in an elastic band. A barrel of potatoes weighs 165 pounds.

    Yesterday’s barrel tickets tallied the night before. How many barrels did you pick? Count the tickets you get back or the ones missing from your original stack.

    maine farm potato fields
    Rolling Farm Fields Planted To A New Crop Of Potatoes. Next Year This Will Be Grain. See The Snow White And Yellow Plants?

    It takes at least four filled to the brim and over baskets of fresh dug potatoes to fill a barrel. And to earn the right to slide one of your numbered tickets out of the pack to wedge into the groove, on the top of the barrel stave.

    That ticket with your number announces to the World that you claim this full barrel for 25, 60 cents or whatever the farmer is paying you this season.

    Piece work not an hourly wage. If you don’t produce, you don’t make much or anything.

    Clear a spot. You put the new empty barrel on it’s side, carefully using two hands to fill it with potatoes. The ones exposed by the squeaking potato digger that back and forth passes your section over and over through out the day of outdoor labor. As you and your fellow potato pickers advance across the wide open farm field one harvested row at a time.

    maine potato farm field picking
    Pick Them Clean, Get Them All Into The Potato Basket. Do These Kids Look Abused, Picked On Out In The Maine Organic Farm Potato Field?

    Your section is how long a portion of the farm field you think you can manage through out the day or until you move to a new one.

    The trick to be just getting the last potato picked up and deposited in your basket before moving into the next row. Hopefully the one that was just freshly dug that only good timing and planning causes. Pick a schedule that matches the digger speed to keep caught up. Work steady.

    maine potato picking
    Lessons earnred young piicking maine potatoes in th farm field!

    But like life, things happen and you can find yourself getting behind in the Maine potato field.

    One of the many observations taught early in the Maine potato field. To learn something that sticks with you for life.

    If you took too big a potato field section, you will run out of steam and get behind.

    potato barrel ticket
    Claim The Barrel, Potato Picking Ticket With Your Number On It.

    Some potato fields are grassier than others and have sods to wrestle with to make sure you “pick them clean”.

    In the Maine potato field, it is no quality spud left behind. And remember that “bruisers are losers”.

    Be careful handling the potatoes.

    Slowly dump the basket into the empty farm field barrels. Before placing the next empty barrel upright every other row. So the farm truck can have a lane to retrieve the full ones headed to the potato house storage. You clear any spuds under the barrel first and place it there. In a spot in your section where it a short trip to avoid wasted steps, needless lugging.

    No rotten potatoes and leave the green ones or rocks in the field not dumped in the barrels please.

    Don’t over fill those barrels lifted up with a boom that lands them on the platform. You don’t want the barrel hoist tong to smash or slice any spuds. Each filled potato barrel is hoisted up from the ground to the truck body using tongs.

    Thrown with position to land on the top of the barrel like a lasso. Then tightened up by lifting, using electrical or hydraulically piston pump that grips the barrel tight and secure. To swing up and onto the empty stake truck.

    Not the easiest job either to roll full potato barrels to the back of that truck lumbering up a side hill.

    Moving those barrels like a game of Tetris, to fill the space quickly. To create a full load to bee line to the potato house.

    Then to hurry back with the empties to throw off to each field section of pickers for the repeat the pick, fill, slide on a ticket barrel number filling process.

    The further away from the potato house in Houlton Maine the barrel or bulk body trucks have to haul, the more apt a shortage of empties is going to happen.

    Nothing hurts production like running out of barrels and trying to make good use of the down time waiting for empties. Picking the tops off the rows you get behind so you can cover your section faster when the fresh empty barrels get tossed onto your section from the truck.

    Eating lunch early, doing your business in the woods for a nature call. All part of potato picking field operations. Hopefully your water jug was put in the freezer, slowly un-thawing as the day unfolds.

    planting maine potatoes to harvest
    It Starts With Planting Potatoes In The Maine Farm Field Back In Spring. Cultivating The Hills, The Potato Rows Over The Summer, Harvesting In Fall.

    Potato tops need to be removed, shaken as pickers advance across the Northern Maine farm field.

    When do you eat? When the tractor pulling potato digger is turned off signally the lunch break. Or sometimes early than noon time because of tractor or digger break down.

    There are digger lags hooked together to create the bed with spaces to filter out the potato field dirt.

    To lay out the two or more field rows into a flat shaped table of new golden or whatever color spuds to fill a basket to add to the barrel.

    maine potato farm field
    Blossoms On Houlton Maine Potato Farm Field.

    More on picking Maine potatoes explained by someone who grew up on a farm and picked from age five and on like my three older brothers.

    You start out picking.

    Graduate to the farm truck or maybe a harvester work shift where you stand and pick out the rocks, the rot and debris.

    So it won’t end up taking up space in the potato storage bins.

    Over the winter months, the same Northern Maine farmer can use the field tested pickers to pack.

    Put up potatoes trailer truck loads shipped to southern markets for distribution.

    So what is the occasional cry that picking potatoes is child abuse?

    It is hard for someone that never picked potatoes or missed out on the fall harvest tradition to grasp the experience.

    You never did it, how could you know without spending time out in the Maine potato field?

    School students spending the three to four weeks out in the Maine potato field are social, talk and laugh as they pick, move from to a new harvest section of the farm.

    The Red Sox are in a pennant race that fall. Someone has a radio next to your section. It’s one for all and all for one to get those spuds out of the ground before a killing frost. Before snow or dodging rain drops that can interfere with the potato picking process. May work later tonight, or Sunday depending on how’s the weather been this fall in Maine.

    red sox game
    Parking Near Fenway. It’s A Trick And Usually Costs A Few Coins. If The Rex Sox Make The Play Offs, Maine Potato Field Workers Tune In, Listen In To Games.

    The potato pickers see the outdoor beauty of the early morning fog, the brilliant fall leave color change and fill their lungs with fresh air.

    Worked muscles bending over filling potato baskets and lugging them to fill the empty barrels gets students into shape for soccer or other school sports ahead. The field dirt and dust will wash off in the tub or shower tonight when they get home. They tell Mom and Dad about the wildlife they saw out in the field today.

    Heading to the small downtown of a Maine community to shop for a new winter jacket is part of the Saturday night learning experience.

    Shopping with your own earned money sharpens your spending skills. And if you don’t perceive a value, you keep looking. Impulse spending control is easier to master when it’s your hard earned money. Not twenty dollar bills spit out, handed to you from the mom and dad ATM.

    locally sourced maine farm vegetables and produce
    Locally Sourced, Farm To Table Maine Produce, Vegetables Like Potatoes. Priceless. Know Your Local Grower! Maine Is The 5th Largest Potato Producing State.

    Learning how to save not just spending is money management.

    But what if you never had an entry level job? Did not work for a wage and have to do a good job or you are not asked back the next Maine fall potato harvest? What’s that? Life’s not fair? Life is what you make it. Life is entry level jobs and responsibility to accepting without griping or weaseling out of it. That you have to show up and perform to be an asset not liability.

    You stick with it because your family needs the money, the help buying your clothes.

    You in turn take better care of clothes you purchase with your own money that is real World right?

    The farmer depends on your to help his family get the crop out and into storage. Grit, determination and dealing with colder weather and days when maybe you are not handstand happy about heading to the field. But you do go and eventually less bothers you as your realize the value of this exercise.

    maine potato field
    Northern Maine Aroostook County Potato Field. A Very Valuable Work Ethic Experience. This Is One Of Your First Entry Level Manual Labor Field Experiences.

    Kids that pick and work the fall Maine potato harvest look around and realize I did something worthwhile during the harvest break.

    They feel good about themselves and part of something outside their home four walls and a roof. Independent, responsible and dreaming about what part of their picking check they get to spend as they see fit. What they would like to buy with their own money.

    And whatever is purchased does not get broken or discarded after the newness is gone. Instead being respected, cared for and put away to protect it because they earned it. Worked too hard not to take care of whatever they bought with their own hard earned money.

    Ask anyone who grew up picking Maine potatoes what they thought about the experience.

    Some become farmers from the experience digging in the dirt. Remember “No farmer, no food”. You gotta eat at least three times a day.

    The harvest workers are part of a proud, capable bunch and learn their value, developing their work ethic. It makes them proud to be from “The County” and that work ethic, dependability to show up and do a good days work is a rural Maine thing.

    four or more baskets of maine potatoes fill a barrel
    Four Or More Baskets Of Fresh Picked Maine Potatoes Fill A Barrel. The Barrel Weighs 165 Pounds. Don’t Forget Your Ticket.

    Striving to do your part, to keep your potato field section picked clean and caught up and get along with the others on the potato chain gang.

    You start to realize that you are not lazy, that you can stick with something that is not for pure entertainment value. Glad my kids learned from the experience of picking Maine potatoes.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers, ME Broker

    207.532.6573  |  info@mooersrealty.com  | 

    MOOERS REALTY 69 North ST Houlton ME 04730 USA

     

  • Potato picking in Maine

    Potato picking in Maine

    Potato picking in Maine.

    For many of us in Northern Maine, picking potatoes for an area farmer was our first real job. For anyone raised on a Maine potato farm like I was, the fall harvest tradition is a strongly ingrained tradition. Many grown ups take their vacations to work the harvest. It’s was that memorable and enriching for them to remember what working the harvest was like. They like helping out an area Maine potato farmer get the crop in the storage bins.

    maine potato picking
    Lessons Earned Young To Apply To Life For The Youth Picking Maine Potatoes Out In The Farm Fields!

    This blog post is all about Maine potato picking.

    First things first. Picking potatoes like raking Maine blueberries, collecting apples climbing the ladder, digging for clams, etc all start with a system. My Dad and Mom preached before charging in to plan your work and work your plan. Reminded us enough times to never ever forget. That “you got to have a system.”

    There is an art to everything we do in life and Mainers are definitely hard working.

    Putting their all into every endeavor with zeal and innovation. Being raised on a Maine farm, the last and most cruel label you could ever wear or have applied was the word “lazy”. You were not, could not be lazy. You learned worth ethic early on in life. Lazy is considered stealing, not contributing for the greater good and is simply being a poor team member.

    Watch a local Maine potato picking field operation video … Hear the digger squeaking by, see how the older pickers help the younger ones in this Maine harvest example.

    Pitch in, work hard and be  proud of your “fire in your belly” passion driven by the industrious gene.

    So Maine potato picking, how does it all work? As a kid, waking up early and first turning on the radio to see if farmer Bob or Jim are starting on time was key. You don’t want to be late for work. True Mainers pride themselves on showing up consistently on time. In fact, if you are not early you are late thinking happens. Because you are trained to be dependable, responsible, a constant wherever you work. You want to be present and accounted for and ready to work.

    Reasons your potato farmer might not be starting the digging on time, at the usual early AM morning time slot?

    There was a frost last night. Gotta wait until the Maine farm field ground warms up and the air temperature is a tad higher. Late in the farm season, snow flurries can happen as the pressure to get these potatoes out of the ground only increases. Often staying in the field to pick hard later into the evening happens when their is a frost in the forecast and it gets down to crunch time.

    farmers market produce
    The Fruits Of The Earth. Farm Fresh Hand Picked Maine Potatoes And Veggies Direct From The Field.

    All that work to till the soil, plant the spring crops, tend them over the summer cultivation into the fall fall harvest finale. No one wants to leave any potato acreage behind in the farm field as winter approaches.

    Another reason for hold your horses and before firing up the farm tractor that pulls the potato digger?

    Rain. Too much moisture last night, yesterday means more time spent getting unstuck as farm harvest equipment sinks in the mud. Only gets mired deeper in the wet saturated farm soil.

    Another reason to wait on getting into the field and firing up the pickers and all the agricultural equipment?

    Too much potato field dirt sticking to the spuds when it is swimming in wet soil. Precious field dirt that gets trucked into the storage facility. Never gets a ride back to the field where it left.

    The loss of farm dirt speeds soil erosion so park it and let the air clear. Wait until the soggy ground dries out the best advice during fall field harvest.

    Hurry up and wait can happen picking potatoes by hand.

    A potato digger gets reaches down below the buried tubers. Gently lifts them up and out of the ground with a metal revolving bed of hooked together connected sifting digger lags.

    To lay out the two hill rows merged into one flat double one. Drying in the fresh air and beating sun before pick em up, put em in the basket potato barrel filing fun.

    Quality control starts with protecting the potato from weather damage of freezing early morning temperatures. From blistering heat by afternoon in the Maine potato field.

    A kid picking shows up to the field sometimes wearing long underwear, layers of clothing. Shedding them as fall harvest temperatures rise and the barrel count increases. Extra pairs of cotton jersey gloves for when one set wears out, gets snagged on a barrel nail. Or plunges into a rotten potato that stinks to high heaven and is wet. Labor warms you up living in Maine. Whether picking potatoes, splitting firewood or shoveling new winter snow. Exercise is your internal heater. Lugging empty barrels, the spud baskets to fill ‘er up to the brim to win burns calories.

    So how’s it work, potato picking in Maine?

    You show up at the edge of the latest unharvested field armed with a water jug, a home made lunch, plenty of snacks. You take your pick of potato baskets made of ash at the beginning of the season. That basket is your weapon to create lots of barrels to make money. You keep tabs on your basket and guard from losing it all harvest long.

    potato farm field picking
    Picking The Potatoes By Handfuls Into A Basket To Fill The Empty Barrels. Full Potato Barrels Weight 165 Pounds Before Storage In Potato Bins Over The Winter.

    Line up behind the field boss picking crew.

    He or she hands out your potato barrel ticket number all wrapped tightly in an elastic. You follow him or her up into the potato field and everyone is assigned a section. From this boot soil drag mark so many paces up to this next one. Sure you can handle this territory row and after dug row in the potato field? That is your field section that you promise to keep picked up for the next three weeks or longer.

    Maine area schools still go in three weeks early the end of summer in some places so the potato harvest recess tradition can continue.

    The kids picking potatoes or working on harvests is vital to the farmer’s harvest plans. Other field workers drive trucks, work on the back loading barrels or running the potato digger.

    Others take the filled barrels or bulk body trucks onto conveyors that deliver the field spuds into storage bills. Filling the potato house a pretty important too. Some school districts still recess for fall break to allow kids to work the Maine potato harvest.

    The potato picker has selected his section, marked the ends with water jug and lunch box or articles of clothing as things heat up.

    You need empty potato barrels to play the game and unearthed spuds to row by row travel across the field. Grab an empty barrel, drag it to the middle of your just dug section if it is a long one to save steps filling it.

    Put the empty barrel on it’s side.

    Lean over and pick the potatoes to clear the area where the barrel gets set up. The potato barrels will go every other row because space for the farm truck to get through is needed to pick up filled ones, drop off new empties.

    Generally an adult or teenage potato picker will fill four baskets to create a 165 pound barrel of spuds. Littler pickers can only lug so large a potato basket and will make more trips to top barrels off to just below the rim.

    Three rules of many in the potato farm field to follow.

    1) Protect the precious potato crop by clearing a spot in a newly dug digger pass before putting up the empty barrel you fill. 2) “Pick ’em clean” which means don’t leave behind perfectly good potatoes. Look under the dirt clumps and grass clods. And 3) No over filling barrels so truck field hands collecting potatoes cause damage with the “tongs”.

    Tongs are the attachment mechanism thrown down from the truck body as it passes your section.

    It hooks on and hoists up by grabbing the full potato barrel using hydraulics or earlier models an truck battery. Tongs attached to a cable or chain to land the barrel up and onto the truck platform. Then while the truck is still moving, roll the barrel back into place. To fill the body with fifty or more loaded barrels. The farm truck is a flat open platform, with wooden stakes around the edge all connected by a rope to secure the barrels for the quick unloading trip to deposit into the potato house bins.

    maine potato picking on Maine farms
    Pick Up, One Potato At A Time. Four Baskets Fill A Potato Barrel In Maine. Teaching My Oldest Daughter The Art Of Potato Picking One Fall Years Ago.

    Each potato picker field worker takes one of his or her tickets from their numbered bundle. Slides it securely into a groove on the top to protect from wind blowing it off the full barrel.

    The potato barrels come in two varieties.

    Maine Potatoes Picked In Barrels Before Bulk Bodies Happened.
    165 Pounds Is The Weight Of A Full Maine Farm Potato Barrel.

    Either cedar wooden staves or the plywood sheet kind. Wrapped in a circle and held together by wooden bark strip sections nailed top, middle, and bottom of the barrel. There are cracks in the top wooden  strip fastener where you slide your numbered ticket into securely for barrel payment credit.

    The tickets collected by the barrel hoist operator as the potato truck slowly plies the field. Tickets put in a two gallon re-purposed oil can with a handle and can opened hole at the top. These cans like the black box in an airplane. Telling the tale of who picked how many today.

    I counted many a ticket with my Mom each night after a harvest supper.

    That supper involved a version of baked potatoes of some kind. Not a lot of rice eaten on a Maine potato farm. We would clear the table of meal dishes, then lay down newspapers. Then shaking out time to empty the dusty cans one by one.

    Lots of fine potato dirt made its way into kitchen table ticket counting process each night.

    Lining up the ticket numbers numerically and next counting each pile after all the cans were empties from the field trucks. Wrapping the tickets up  with an elastic to return to whoever is assigned this potato picking field number for this fall season. That person could count their tickets to know how they did yesterday but most already had a pretty good idea.

    A check at the end of the week barrel count announced in the memo section the total barrel production. Tabulated  from the day by day hand tally for the grand total each week to determine the pay check size.

    When I was a kid, 25 cents a barrel was the going rate per barrel. My four kids each picked and it was 60 cents for each full picked barrel ticketed during their era. Money you earned, not just handed to you by Mom or Dad without effort on your part.

    The Saturday night ritual of going into down town much like the giddy feeling you sense in the western movies.

    When some dirt farmer or trapper, miner, whoever rode in off the trail to town for supplies. Kids pitched in an bought their winter clothes to help out the family budget. Most of the checks saved for something useful like your winter jacket. You bought it, you take better care of it.

    Very shrewd and careful as you shop with other cleaned up potato pickers you bumped going in and out of store doing the same bargain hunting. When it is your own hard earned money being spent, impulse spending control happens. You keep looking when you don’t think what you are considering buying is worth so many barrels of potatoes or not.

    Part of the potato picking money a kid can blow on something fun. I remember saving for a new bike, then a motorized one after that.

    Dreaming about it in the field along with awfully good snacks and carefully prepared tasty lunches that helped smooth out the laboring. Every fall, the new Sears or Montgomery Ward Christmas arrived to help the dreaming process take your mind off the pick and fill field drill.

    The other field crew pickers are your friends on the potato chain gang.

    The grower needs you to show up, pick ’em clean and help get the crop out before old man winter arrives. Fellow pickers who you ate lunch with, talked to in neighboring field sections. You rode to and from the field in the back of a pick up bed with these dusty, dirty hard working spud handlers. You learned other entertaining skills… like walking balanced on a rolling barrel. Or becoming William Tell accurate putting a small potato on the end of a wood’s switch stick that is used in brief potato skirmishes until the field boss comes into view. Back to work after a little potato picking brevity.

    Potato picking was your entry level job, your first real employment for money.

    Not just a house hold chore like making your bed or helping do the dishes because it is your turn. You picked more barrels if the field harvest yield was higher, if the growing season was favorable, when the potato house was not too far away. Which caused delayed return of the empties you needed to fill to keep from getting behind. Lots can affect your daily barrel count. How much sleep you got last night, if you were on an end field section that kept shortening. Or growing longer and causing discouragement as the hot sun beamed down from overhead. All as you found yourself hopelessly falling behind. How cold or windy or rainy it was, how much the digger pushed you to keep caught up was the potato field dynamics to do the best you can.

    Lessons learned in the Maine potato picking field that last for life.

    How big a section can you handle? Don’t bite off more than you can chew. You don’t want to get fifty rows behind because it was too long. Although if you did, another potato field rule. No one leaves the field when day is done until everyone is picked up and no dug potato rows exist.

    supporting maine farming
    Where Your Love Lies Obvious On The Maine License Plate. Farm to Table Is Pretty Sacred.

    You do run out of barrels and that is the time to head to the woods for a nature call. When you use the expression “I have to go see a man about a horse” as you carefully stride across the un-dug potato rows.

    If waiting for the empty barrel truck to return from the potato house delays production, might be a good time for a snack or to eat your lunch early. Make good use of your time another lesson learned. Shift gears quickly and expect set backs and road blocks. But you rise to the occasion and take it all in stride as a professional, seasoned potato harvest picker or spud house worker.

    Pick the potato tops off your section of newly dug potatoes. That will make filling barrels quicker when you do hear the thud of an empty or two being dropped as the truck passes your section.

    Be nice to the truck crew who might land an extra empty because you did. That’s my insider local expert as a long time potato picker in the farm field since a little shaver.

    When you run out of barrels, might trot down to a place in the field where there are plenty and folks are behind. To pick a couple barrels and then return to your own section just as empties arrive or the broken digger comes back alive and squeals by. Stay busy.

    Some stand up and lean over.

    Others drop to their knees and drag the potato basket beside or behind them to fill it with golden, other color spud varieties. Shot in the Sherman Maine area, the video embedded in the top portion early on in this blog post shows the sights and sounds of harvest in case you missed it. The video below near the end show and tells what potato picking looks like in the potato house working the storage / grading lines.

    The home made donuts, cookies, sandwiches and ring dings, yodels, ding dongs, moon pies and candy bars. The fuel to keep the potato picker rolling for quick energy. It all tastes so much better out in the fresh air. Enjoyed amidst the brilliant fall foliage colors surrounding you in the scenic Maine potato fields with your friends and relatives.

    Picking potatoes, you are out in nature.

    You see the occasional deer, rabbit, fox, black bear or moose out of the corner of your eye too. As the wildlife wander by the edge of the field. Crossing it to head to a babbling brook for a slurp of refreshing drink of cold cool running brook water. Or curious and watching what you are up to as you fill barrels and slowly as a group advance across the harvest field.

    I was raised on a Maine potato farm where every family member has a vital role. Starting as a young grasshopper, the fall harvest potato picking season just one of the tasks working together with your mom, dad, brothers and sisters. Back when I was a kid, everyone picked potatoes and there were more farmers needing the hand crews.

    My Dad always said pickers did a better job and were gentler on the potato crop quality then mechanical harvesters. Now less farmers, more larger Maine potato growers make potato hand picking crews not as common.

    On my Maine family farm I bought from my three older brothers, hand crews still used. But instead of barrels, orange baskets gets filled to empty into wooden two thousand pound wooden box crates. All organic with the kids paid by the hour instead of piece meal by the basket.

    low cost maine vacations
    Sampling The Local Maine Location On Your Cheap Vacation. Learning What Life Is Like Here! Early Morning Heading To The Maine Potato Field To Harvest Spuds.

    Not just bending over or on your knees to pick potato for the fall harvest work. Other jobs exist like working on a harvester, in the potato house grading what the bulk body unloaded that ends up in storage bins. There are also jobs over the winter working to get the spuds loaded into tractor trailer trucks to deliver to the produce markets. To plant in spring and cultivate and hoe over the summer to raise the next fall harvest crop.

    As the Maine blog post wraps up, this is a short clip on showing with the spuds end up bring graded, working in a potato house. You are there sight and sounds below.

    It is enlightening to see the kids today rise to the occasion and dig in to work hard during the Maine potato farm harvest.

    The lessons learned in the Maine potato or whatever vegetable field or fruit orchard picking operation are never forgotten. Everything you learn is your system for life and used as you approach any other task big or small. You learn to have a system, develop a plan and stay resourceful with resiliency with lots of passion to do your best. Some of the pickers end up becoming the next generation of farmers to continue the tradition and put food on the table.

    Hope you enjoy this blog post on the Maine farm potato picking institution.

    Thank you for being a follower of the Me In Maine blog that tries to paint the picture of what living in Vacationland is all about one topic at a time. Maine truly is the way life should be.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers, ME Broker

    | 207.532.6573 | info@mooersrealty.com | 

    MOOERS REALTY 69 North ST Houlton ME 04730 USA

  • Squeak Squeak Sound Of The Maine Potato Farm Harvester, Digger….

    Getting Maine Potatoes Out Of The Farm Land In To Spud House Storage.
    Snacks, Lunch Tastes 100 Times Tastier In The Maine Harvest Potato Field.

    Picking potatoes, working as a kid on the Maine farm land means starting early, getting up when it is pitch black outside.

    Rise and shinning to the smell of frying, sizzling bacon and home fries, eggs just the way you like them. Partnered with a stack of pancakes, french toast drizzled in Houlton Farms Dairy real butter and maple, blueberry or strawberry syrup. Preparing the sleepy workers, the potato warriors for the another day in the Maine field or spud house.

    Sometimes the radio or potato farmer hot line pre-recorded message announces a delay in the harvest start time.

    To be at the field at 8AM because of frost, or a rain set back. Possibly a scrub of the potato harvest mission altogether. Regardless, like a paratrooper gathered around the open airplane door to jump when the word comes in, the Maine farm workers need to have an equally gut busting lunch packed to get them through the day. The cold mornings, the blistering hot afternoons and any other kind of weather in between coupled with hard outdoor laboring hour after hour burn a lot of calories.

    Long hours when the weather is good means make sure extra water, snacks, a sandwich or two is handcrafted for that field lunch. Ice added to the water jug that is crucial for staying hydrated. To wash down the potato dust, to wet the whistle during the manual labor.

    Hard work but lessons learned in the Maine potato field classroom that stay with the worker for life. Making the most of the rain, cold, lack of sleep if you stayed up too late and played the night before. Clearing your head with the blast of fall air in Maine sweeping across the open potato field. Zipping up the sweatshirt a little tighter. Wishing you had added another clothing layer this morning as you fumbled in the dark to get ready to head to the section of Maine farm that needs harvesting attention focus today.

    Grapevine rumor has it among the migrant field workers that travel the circuit to harvest crops of all kind that Maine blueberry raking is harder than potato picking or harvester work.

    Because of the hotter weather weeks earlier in the year Downeast in Maine where most of the succulent blue good for you fruit is plucked, boxed, shipped to the processor freezers.

    Both field work arenas can be better all the way around if the Maine weather cooperates. If breakdowns are minimal and if the workers around you are pleasant, hardworking. Not Eeyores, whiners and lazy. Like any workplace setting, the chore at hand is less taxing if you know how to work, enjoy labor and rub shoulders with others wired the same way on the job chain gang.

    Strong, dependable work ethic in Maine is not a secret. To be considered lazy by your peers would be the worse shame a person could carry. Discrimination has happened a lot over the years because of what field work picking produces in kids started early. Begun when all family members are knee high to a grasshopper tall and brought along with older brothers, sisters, parents to the fields for the Maine harvest. Joy in being industrious, learning how to do the work more efficiently on the Maine fields meant crew foreman in the cities ask one question to the crowd of job applicants.

    “Who grew up on a Maine farm, worked on one in the audience?”

    Hands that went up meant a response from the guy with the clipboard, wearing a hard hat as he motions, saying “Come with me. You have a job. You start now”.

    Maine Potato Picking By Hand Is Hard Work Video

    Working Inside Grading Potato House Spuds Video

    Maine, we appreciate everything a little extra. Work a little harder, respect our surroundings and the fewer people in them a whole lot more.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers, ME Broker
    207.532.6573
    info@mooersrealty.com
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  • Learning From Your Kids Travels In And Out Of Maine.

    Maine Blueberry Raking Under The Hot Sun.
    $2.50 Per Box, 25 Pounds Or Half Bushel Paid For Raking Maine Blueberries.

    As children grow up, graduate from high school, college in Maine, they venture out, explore, begin their adult life.

    And what they learn, they share with parents back at the ranch. Or when a trip is taken to where they are a long way from the childhood Maine home.

    Oldest son Alex is swinging back through Maine from Colorado rafting, working winters at A Basin ski area to do his annual blueberry and potato pilgrimage.

    And Maine blueberry living on the barrens is not something I experienced growing up on a potato farm.

    So interesting to hear about the Maine blueberry gathering process that starts at 5AM with no delay due to frost like fall potato harvesting. Wyman’s is the central blueberry in Maine giant that runs the processing / distribution centers. The summer blueberry harvest like Maine potato fall operations is about three weeks long.

    Tines, rakes to comb through the Maine blueberry bushes gather the precious fruit. Strings for lanes are laid out in a field to follow for the blueberry picking. It helps if you get between two seasoned Honduran blueberry rakers / pickers as it serves to help like NASCAR drafting. You get pushed, pulled along by their momentum. Alex had a blueberry rake with 70 tines. To glean a great deal of blueberries with each swipe, swath taken with the rake. As you follow a course across the barrens marked out with a simple white string for lanes.

    A Mexican family shows up, puts on the apron, serves the blue berry workers meals out of a cook shack with many gas burners.

    Five dollars for lunch, six dollars for dinner which is unlimited. Breakfast is on your own with egg sandwiches made at 4 am to prepare for a Maine summer day that will only get hotter as it runs it course. As you wield a blueberry rake, the bigger the better for box count production.

    Strategy for more productive Maine blueberry raking, picking for the boxes that head to the processors to be frozen and distributed around the world? Find a section, row, lane that is not overgrown with bushes, rock out croppings to work around. The lower to the ground, cleaner sections have more blueberries per square foot. Less culch, other vegetation to wrestle with.

    Like potato sections in Maine that are grass free, not clumped up like end rows that grow longer or contract, these type of conditions for blueberries are more efficient to glean, rake. Not so much a hide and seek, hunt and peck process to maximize the fruit collected which translates into more boxes. Twenty five pounds is a half bushel of blueberries which the raker earns $2.50 for raking.

    In Alex’s two years of blueberry raking, staying at migrant shanty cabins for his exodus back to Maine before potato harvest and the sling shot back to being a Colorado ski lift operator winters, white albino berries have been seen once. Rare and used for jam for the locals.

    Thought to have some special powers, he said he spied only one ten foot section of the stand out white Maine blueberries.

    I asked if sampling the Maine blueberry happens on the barrens remembering nibbling on fresh strawberries during picking as a kid myself on the farm. He said with pesticides folks are warned not to, that it could cause rumblings down below.

    Maine, big state, the people here spend more of life outdoors.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers, ME Broker