Tag: maine snow sledding

  • Maine Snowmobile Clubs

    Maine Snowmobile Clubs

    Maine snowmobile clubs.

    It takes many hardworking volunteers doing everything behind the scenes. Keeping the ITS trails groomed, twitching new ones is only part of it. Putting up signage, building bridges, feeding hungry trail riders. Raising funds to maintain or buy a new snowmobile trail groomer.

    maine snowmobile trail groomer
    Cuffing Right Along Grooming, Smoothing, Carving Up ITS Snow Sled Trails.

    Snowmobile clubs do their part to dovetail with local Maine winter community celebrations too.

    They are welcome wagon ambassadors to the out of town or state sled trail riders. Sharing the natural beauty of Maine by suggesting memorable trail rides to not forget to experience.

    The biggest issue for Maine snowmobile clubs can be Mother Nature and Jack Frost.

    Like farming, depending on the weather is always a gamble. Feast or famine.

    Maine ski areas put a lot of time into setting up the snow making nozzles on the slopes. Only to see above freezing, too warm temperatures mixed with rain, wind and fog arrive to wash it away. The same happens to well groomed snow trails when the red rises too high in the glass tube outside the kitchen window.

    The price of gas was more of an issue when two cycle, mix the oil with the gas higher fuel consuming snowmobiles played on the ITS trails. The four cycle machines are more costly to buy, but easier on the wallet to feed the octane.

    Not so much anxiety worried about topping off the tank as you prepare to head off into the “Great North Woods” where gas stations are missing.

    snow sled groomer
    By Yourself On The Newly Groomed ITS Snow Sled Trails. Nothing Like It.

    This blog post looks at the dynamics of a small rural Maine snowmobile club. How they start, what needs to happen for them to survive.

    Maine land owners to allow snow sledders access to their property is key. That is the first step to setting up a Maine snowmobile club.

    Back in the early 1960’s when there were 50 flavors of snowmobile makers, you made your own trails. You broke down a lot.

    You  tinkered for two hours to ride for one because snow sleds were not so dependable for long distance trail riding.

    And if you are cold, you are not dressed right today or then. The getting stuck and digging out, tugging up front on skis and tramping down around the snow machine work out keeps you warm as toast. You learn to stay on the trail. It saves getting a hernia digging out and also pleases your land owner that lets you use their land. IF you stay on the marked sled trail.

    In the early days of snow sledding, it was stay pretty close to home and on hard pack surfaces when you headed out snowmobiling.

    I remember those early Johnson Skeehorse days when you thought twice about heading out across a deep, bottomless snowy farm field.

    I heard stories about old hardcore Maine snowmobilers taking annual sled trips up into Quebec, Labrador.

    Hearing the stories about breakdowns, incredible scenery and how they planned for the out of the country snowmobile trip. What they plan to do next year the same or differently. Like many things, ideas start with seeing how they do it in other areas of the country. Lots of ideas learned from other Canadian snowmobile club trips. Those visits lead to let’s try to apply what we saw on the trail to our Maine snow sled club and backyard trail system.

    When you snowmobile up in Maine’s St John River Valley, you enjoy twin lanes like the Interstate is divided.

    Safer, more work for the groomer but just a different approach to laying out the trail system that goes in wide circles around the clubhouse.

    So besides a network of Maine landowners willing to share their property with snowmobilers, a clubhouse for a home is needed.

    A local Ward log home maker donated a building the Meduxnekeag Ramblers in Littleton Maine use for their clubhouse. Many of the local snow sled clubhouses are made of logs because Maine is 91 percent wooded.

    Maine has lots of log home and cabin makers willing to lend a helping hand to local snowmobile clubs.

    Once the log home kit is secured, other local vendors will step up and help out with manpower and materials.

    Here’s a video showing a typical Maine snowmobile club breakfast.

    The snowmobile clubhouse also is used for weddings, parties, executive retreats.

    The rental income helps keep the snowmobile club out of the red and keeps membership engaged beyond just the winter trail riding sled season.Reimbursement from the state of Maine for trail grooming expenses is key. It is a partnership of state and local snowmobile club to document expenses for reimbursement. Money from snowmobile registrations, local fund raising keep the trail system healthy. The local businesses that directly benefit from winter snow sledders step up and give back heavily too. The Maine Snowmobile Association helps guide the local sled clubs too.

    Local motels, sporting camps have groomed sled trails right up to their doorstep.

    These local snowmobile clubs deliver the sledding tourist right to their business operations. Gas stations, local snow sled retailers benefit from the network of trails Maine snowmobile clubs keep polished. These are new dollars plowed back into the local economy that turn over six to seven times which benefits Maine taxpayers. Celebrations like Moosestompers help the locals shake cabin fever around the first of every February up in Aroostook County Maine.

    The Maine snowmobile trail maps are sponsored by businesses too.

    You can quickly cover a lot of trails on say ITS 83 that uses old railroad beds. These winter snow sledding highways come complete with bridges to span waterways. They complement nicely the local landowner side trails and large wooded tracts opened up by loggers who are also “sled heads”.

    I have had Maine real estate buyers surprised I would allow a snowmobile trail across my family farm.

    farm in maine
    Have A Snow Sled Groomed Trail Across My Maine Farm Property.

    It is explained that landowners that add their acreage to the local snowmobile trail map are a valuable partner. Snowmobilers are reminded to respect the Maine landowner. That use of their private property is a privilege not a right.

    Local snow sledders who love the winter sport are the glue that hold together the Maine snowmobile clubs.

    maine snow sled groomer
    Making Sled Trails, Carving New Snow Into Winter Highways.

    Lucky to have had two uncles that were Maine snowmobile dealers.

    Uncle Carl Hagan sold Sno-Jets and my uncle Cedric Benn peddled Polaris sleds and parts. As a kid, I learned a lot working on a 1966 Sno-Jet and before that an even older Johnson Skeehorse snow machine. Then Polaris machines after that with a couple Yamaha’s thrown in to the snow sled mix.

    Heading To The Ice Fishing Shack To Set The Traps.
    Ice Fishing Easier Thanks To Snowmobiles.

    Growing up, I was also lucky to have neighborhood snowmobile enthusiasts who kept the area kid’s sled running like a top.

    A local mechanic for the B & A railroad, Ronnie Brewer helped the neighborhood kids keep the machines running. He was like a shop teacher helping us figure out what’s wrong and

    how to fix it. Friday night with all the kids lucky enough to have an early snow sled to use had it made. When the Sno-Jet metal gas tank rusted up, I decided to add a red side gas tank bungeed into place. The portable gas tank idea from Arctic Cat. It interfered with sitting down but no kid I knew in those early days ever sledded that way.

    Early snow sledding was not sitting down and steering was narrow skis stance anyway.

    To stay on the trail that you mostly made yourself, it was easy does it squeezing between tight spacing through the woods. You were on one knee. Or leaning, standing up and throwing the sled where you wanted it to go heading into curves. Before carbide ski runners and wider spacing up front, the snow sled steering involved way way more than just pushing and pulling your handlebar movements.

    snow sledding bridges
    Bridges To Keep The Snow Sled Trail Connected. Clubs Work Hard To Build Them And To Mark The Trails, Put Up Signage.

    Just like hockey games, you can not sit down and fully experience them.

    It is on your feet every period and into overtime to experience it all. Early snow sledding was like that too. On your feet or on your knees ladies and gentlemen. You did not sit down on the job of maneuvering the snowmobile to negotiate turns, to avoid hitting trees. No one wanted bent straight up snow skis or a dent in their cowling. You did not have wide and handsome trails and it took more work leaning into corners. If you had a passenger on back, you told them to follow your move and lean too. Otherwise, the both of you would be out in the pucker brush and holding up the rest of the sled head trail gang.

    setting up sled club breakfast
    Set Up, Getting Ready For A Snow Sled Club Breakfast. Trail Riding Builds Large Hunger Out In All That Fresh Maine Air.

    We went to grass snow sled racers, over to Canada to watch the snowmobile circuit competitions at New Brunswick province community parks.

    My Aunt Ruth’s partner was a big kid himself. Freeman Taylor kept our snowmobiles going and let us use a souped up 1964 Ski Doo and his 1973 Skiroule.

    The former snowmobile was a bored out 10 horsepower cranking out 22 ponies with poor brakes and missing safety guards.

    The old Ski Doo with a noisy straight pipe, a sprinkle of that red fluid labeled “fuel activator” sprinkled in the gas tank. Too narrow and loose as a goose to handle at higher trail speeds than the sled was original designed to be going. The Skiroule was modern and ran very well with its 25 horsepower engine. I think their RTX model was way ahead of its time like the Kawasaki snow machines and other notable snowmobile models.

    maine winter snow
    New Snow Means Improved Sled Trails And $$$ In The Main Small Town Local Winter Economy.

    Freeman also had an 80 horsepower Skiroule with three carbs, a rope wind up hand crank and ear splitting tuned exhaust pipes.

    It was fun watching Freeman race on grass or the circuit parks. But he had a heck of time keeping drive belts from fraying and failing before the end of the race.

    Often many laps ahead of the field and often coming in a lower place pushing the dead sled over the finish line.

    Too much power from the 793 cc Hirth power plant delivered to the clutching and drive track channel the problem.

    winter ice fishing
    Easier To Access Ice Traps Using Snow Sleds These Days.

    When there is a snow drought, clubs still have the Christmas parties, mark the trails, keep the social element going.

    getting directions snow sledding
    “I Think We Take This Connector. How’s Your Sled For Gas Bob? Better Top Off.”

    Maine is like that, feast or famine and we all adjust making the most of what we have. We are always grateful for what we have that is always enough. Take what you need, pass along the rest to someone that has less. Is it like that where you live now?

    The sights you can see on a snowmobile out in nature in the middle of a Maine winter back drop are pretty moving.

    Wildlife, snow covered mountains and trees surround you. Waterfalls, rivers, frozen lakes. Signs that someone was on the trail before you to break the way and make it easier sledding.

    Bring your camera to capture those Kodak moments on and off the snowmobile ITS trail.

    Through the woods, out over an open farm field, crossing a lake if conditions are safe. Tread lightly. Carry in and out. Stay on the marked snow sled trail. The experience is one of a kind and you can get places easily that are not accessible by car.

    Maine is not just summer vacations and that’s all she wrote.

    Get the whole nine yards, spend time in Maine all four seasons to experience Vacationland to the fullest. We local natives do and feel so fortunate to live in Maine full time, all year round.

    l hope you get to see Maine from atop a snowmobile seat this winter.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers, ME Broker

    207.532.6573 |  info@mooersrealty.com  |

    MOOERS REALTY 69 North ST Houlton ME 04730 USA

  • Groom Maine, New Vanity Plate To Open Up, Smooth The Trails.

    Maine is under populated, unspoiled. And the best experiences are when you can get where man does not tread often.

    Nooks and crannies not opened up and commercialized are what rural Maine’s wilderness is all about. But tapping into these areas easily is not always so easy.

    Outside Trail System Snow Sled Grooming.
    Hop On Your Snow Sled… See Maine Snowmobiling.

    That is why support of grooming trails in Maine is critical. To the economy, to support the many sports. That use this network of natural access. That criss-cross Maine with bridges to span waterways.

    To provide funding for the twitching trails, removing brush. Putting up directional, warning signage. To make sure your vacationer or locals are always up close and personal with the wildlife. On top of, overlooking the ride by of the waterways.

    To take in the drop your jaw long views. To hear the sound of the wind. The rushing streams, rivers, water fall drops. To breathe in deeply the fragrant Maine woods. To slow down, unplug, recharge in Maine.

    The vanity plate for grooming trails assistance is for local Maine residents only. Started by Candice Pinkham of Presque Isle Maine, the hope is to sell 2000 plates.

    It is important for Maine’s extensive snow sled trail system to be heard about online. So those vacationing families and friends can plan yearly trips to experience Maine. To help the coffers of the small communities, clubs, groups that support the trail network. If you groom it they will come.

    Maine Winters, Not Spent Indoors. Not On A Couch!
    Snow Shoeing, Hoofing It Or Riding The Groomed ITS Snow Sled System?

    The evolution of Maine snow sledding has been an interesting one.

    Things have come a long way from the days of riding just the back forty. The change a spark plug, tinker for two hours to ride for one on pretty much non-existent groomed trails. Maine, see it riding.

    Snow sledding in Maine is a great way to fill your lungs with fresh, crisp, clean air. And bring your camera. You will want to capture the scenery that is sugar coated with snow In Maine.

    When you step off, hit the red handlebar square button. Turn off and listen to the sounds of Maine in the woods, on an iced covered lake.

    The connection between you and the Maine surroundings bumps it up a notch or two. You figure out what is important in life, where your priorities should be and are in Maine.

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

  • The Pink Ribbon, Best Maine Christmas Ever.

    The boy was from a Maine family of three kids, his mother passed away from cancer at thirty one years of age.

    His Dad was a cook in the army. But you would not know it from the menu selection served up, brought back stateside. The TV dinners, frozen pot pies and never ending supply of morning cereals of shredded wheat, corn flakes, puffed rice kept them fed.

    Early Maine Snow Sledding.
    No Thumb Warmers, Heated Radiators Under Your Feet. Tinker For Two, Ride For One Hour. Helped Teach You Survival Mechanics.

    The oldest and only son decided he would be a self taught cook.

    Reached, tied on the apron at meal time. And appreciated his Dad of thirty two taking on the solo responsibility of raising he and his two sisters. A year later the father married a much younger gal, a waitress he connected with at coffee.

    In her early twenties, the marriage did not last long.

    The son figures because his Dad was still married to a ghost, his deceased Mom. That he never truly got over to move on and begin again to be in love. Make a life to share with another, beyond just his young family.

    Working for the public works department in 1964, the pay was not going to make you land on the Forbes top one hundred wealthiest. He was rich, grateful in other ways. And over the childhood moving five times. From rent to rent. Getting the kids raised the best the Dad could in a small Northern Maine community. Where the village all pitches in too. This son’s little league team was O’donnell’s Express and his uniform was more man than child sized.

    The son with the cook’s apron on figuring better cuisine started and ended with his stepping up to the plate.

    Lamenting his pot roast did not begin to compare with his Mom’s meal time entry. But there was no contest with his baked beans. Which over the years became his signature meal time offering when the dinner bell sounded. Cooked to perfection. To die for meal offering that his stomach roll over the cinched up belt proves hit it’s mark with deadly accuracy.

    Maine Small Farm Land Photo
    Growing Up In Maine, The Fun Home Made, Outdoors.

    Soaking the pretty white and splashed with maroon colors Jacob’s Cattle variety. For the bean pot last night as the beat goes on. Memories linger. The years pile up and the seasons change with a sense of urgency. But you gotta eat right?

    One Christmas, the corner decorated tree was very sparse in the present department.

    The three kids went to sample the sugar plums, get prepared for the roof landing of the red velvet, white fur clad sleigh and flying deer pilot. Not expecting much due to the missing cargo usually already arranged under the colored lights, tinseled trees of past by this late date on the holiday calendar.

    The next morning the mood was vastly different. Happy, smiling kids bounding down the old farm house 2nd floor stairway on the Hogan Road spying a tree. Loaded with pretty papered wrapped gifts. Flowing like lava out from under the tree, flooding into the room. Leaving little floor space for the opening family ritual to begin. Starting with the oldest first or was it the other way around? Who’s turn in rotation again?

    A pink ribbon guided the way, created a path. From the living room, through the dining room, across the Maine farm house kitchen.

    Out into the attached, unfinished back woodshed. The place where periodic discipline was administered. Or just threatened, hinted at would do the trick. Because of success reining in an out of control child with an attitude, nose out of joint early on. Not waiting. For perspective, to bring them back into line to keep the family home happy, calm, quiet.

    Maine Outdoors Simple Living.
    Look For The Sunshine. Unplug, Recharge In Maine.

    Parked in the center of the shed was a brand new 1964 Ski Doo or called then Bombardier snow sled. Ten horse power under the bright yellow cowling, perched above the narrow ski stance.

    Ready for the recoil to receive a yank. Strong tug from a youngster barely able to pull hard enough to start the snow sled. The machine high school skinny, not barnyard wide for a reason. Because groomed, marked Maine snow sled trails and bridges over, spanning water hazards were not yet invented. Not in vogue.

    It was necessary to being a skinny profile in snowmobile width. To squeeze, needle through forest trees. To get anywhere beyond the just the pretty predictable, round and round back yard.

    Learning to lean into corners, sledding on one knee standing up. To move and groove, shift weight and guide, throw the light weight sled through new fresh white powder. To keep from becoming bogged down, bogie wheels buried and causing a winter field exhaustive work out. Digging out of a deeper hole the harder you tried to throttle your way away from the stall in the outdoor fun. Settling into quick sand. The new fluffy powder snow as you lose steam heading up a hill incline.

    The sled described this morning at coffee at a corner store pit stop, fuel up I can see clearly.

    Even though a Snow Jet blue snowmobile experienced driver, my Aunt Ruth had a boyfriend, Freeman Taylor had one that was souped up, modified to churn out twenty two horsepower. Which was pretty unstable at the higher speeds than any stock machine produced. For the narrow stock ski stance unlike snow sleds of today. Where they are sit, point, steer, hang on. Go very fast on the ice rockets on well groomed, marked ITS trails.

    No doubt this Christmas snow machine from Willy Lynds was not many if any serial number digits away.

    From the one on Freeman Taylor’s yellow winter big boy toy. The fellow with the loud memorable, infectious laugh. The habit of a steady, slow drip of Schaeffer warm beer flowing into his system. Who did his best to keep all the neighborhood kid’s snow machines of all sizes, colors, kinds and ailments moving up and down the local trails.

    The best Christmas ever, the Dad went all out. And scratching his head, looking back on what his father, the sole breadwinner did not bring home weekly for wages, the son wonders how he did it. Made the Christmas to remember for he and his two younger sisters as a single parent, a Mister Mom.

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

  • The Weekend Is Coming, You Need Maine Snow Sledding, Snowmobile Trail Reports.

    What are the Maine snow sled, snowmobile ITS trails like in Northern Maine?

    Maine Snow Sledding, Snowmobiling
    The Average Snow Sledder In Maine Spends $150 A Day. Win Win, Big Fun & New $$$ Happens For Small Communities.

    It is no secret Maine takes how it grooms Maine snow sled trails pretty serious.
    And the local towns, folks all pitch in, roll out the red carpet. To make sure you feel like a VIP when you trailer and drop or snow sled into their Maine town. Looking for a place in the region to eat, places to stay. To spend some time exploring, discovering a part of Maine so so different than just the sea coast towns that get all the splash. Most of the spotlight attention. Find out what was left out of the Maine tourist information brochures. Come visit the “Crown Of Maine”.

    The Official Snowmobile Trail Report 1/8/2014 From The Desk Of:

    Kathy Mazzuchelli Caribou Parks & Recreation Department

    55 Bennett Drive Caribou, Me. 04736 207-493-4224

    “Everyone is feeling the wrath of the Polar Vortex and I am not hearing anymore global warming theories…. Although…..how the heck can you get rain one day and have it minus 20 sandwiching the showers.

    Maine Snow Sledding, One More Outdoor Recreational Option.
    Maine Snowsledding, Hop On, Have Fun, Get Off The Couch. Stop Hibernating.
    Fortunately the rain didn’t hurt the snow sled trail system which was awesome over the weekend but check out some of the cautionary notes….. Frozen ground doesn’t absorb water, running water goes downhill, running water is warm and as long as its running it doesn’t freeze so if it looks like a puddle…..well it probably is and it will take a few days to freeze over.

    Water from recent rains has been collecting on rivers and lakes so you will find a lot of slush please use extreme caution. Pretty near everyone noted some water holes in low lying areas that are not freezing too quickly despite cold temps so be alert and try to avoid them wherever possible.

    Deer and moose have been sited everywhere so please use extreme caution especially riding at night especially on 83 and 83 B in Caribou where there are significant deer.

    Keep in mind that there are some long distances between gas stations so look at the reroutes and plan accordingly.

    There is an active logging operation on ITS 81 the border trail on the Limestone section so please proceed slowly and with caution.There will be plowed sections on ITS 85 near Ox Bow, north of Ashland on the reroute and north of Wallagrass most of which will be remedied with snow.

    Trail Info …

    ITS 85 Now open from Shin Pond north to Ft Kent and Madawaska. There is active logging still on the Ox Bow end with 3 sections about 1 mile each. Ashland was able to complete their reroute but they need snow so you will find plowed road for a bit. Also the section north of Wallagrass is now open but needs a bit more snow. 71D is not open.

    ITS 83 All the reroutes on the southern end have been completed but remember to watch for signs. Also there are three active logging ops between Linneus and Dyer Brook so follow signs, keep right and slow down. Sledders will have to use caution. Also there is a considerable reroute between Bridgewater and Mars Hill that is well marked but you will leave the railbed. From there on it is clear sailing but you will come into logging as you approach Madawaska.

    ITS 81 This trail has not been groomed from Squa Pan to the ITS 85 intersection but Mars Hill has coming to Squa Pan. Heading north from Mars Hill everyone has been out but there is a logging operation on the Limestone section of the border trail section of 81 that is very active so USE EXTREME CAUTION.

    ITS 92 This trail is in good shape with all projects out. Just a reminder that 92A out of St Francis to Carter Brook is closed until the end of January or mid February due to logging. Also Allagash is grooming a trail to Glazier Lake and that does connect of ITS 92 even though it doesn’t show up on the Northern Maine map.

    ITS 90 Everyone groomed early this week and will be out by Friday. Watch for deer !!

    ITS 88 Ashland was out on this week to open their section so this trail is now open through to Ft Fairfield. Remember there is a reroute on the section in Ft Fairfield Maine so watch for signage.

    ITS 86 This route is open east and west with good conditions but again there may be plowed sections on the Ox Bow end so use caution. And remember sadly the Ox Bow Lodge burned down earlier this winter and the Masardis Trading Post also burned down……both represent a huge loss to the area. 71D is not open yet.

    ITS 105 Is open to the 81 intersection but may have limited grooming on the Squa Pan end.

    ITS 120 Now open all the way through from Eagle Lake to the 92 connection south of Allagash.

    Rt 100 Now rerouted back to the old route between Caswell and Rt 89.

    Rt 89 Now open between ITS 83/90 in Caribou north to the Rt 100 intersection only. It is NOT open to the 94 intersection.

    Rt 94 Van Buren is grooming through a logging op so watch for signs and PLEASE stay off the road.

    Daigle and Soldier Pond both have been out but remember. Rt 73B between Ft Kent and the 83B intersection in Daigle is closed so use 73C to get into Ft Kent Maine.

    Connector 61 is groomed from the ITS- 83 intersection on Sam Drew Mt in Oakfield to the Railroad crossing near the Oakfield- Smyrna town line.

    From the Oakfield/Smyrna line north to the intersection with Trail 81, Trail 61 has been packed but not groomed.

    The 1/2 mile section of Trail 61 that uses the Brown Rd in Oakfield has been plowed and is currently being used by logging trucks. This is a very narrowly plowed road and extreme caution is necessary.

    Trail 64 on the Smoki Haulers end has been groomed.

    On The Social Side …

    Meduxneakeag Ramblers Breakfast Saturdays 6-9 a.m. at the clubhouse.

    Washburn Trailrunners Breakfast /Lunch Saturdays 7 a.m.-3p.m. Sunday 7 a.m.-noon at the clubhouse.

    Presque Isle Snowmobile Club Stew Nights Fridays 5-7 p.m. at the clubhouse.

    January 12 Fort Fairfield Club Breakfast 7-10 a.m. on the Strickland Rd $7 adults/ $4 kids under 12.

    January 19 Portage Lakers Radar Runs Registration 9 a.m.

    January 25 & 26 Long Lake Fishing Derby…..7 lakes and $12500 in prizes !!!

    February 8 10th Annual Andy Santarre Sno-Run call 207-498-6431 for more info.

    February 8-9 Caribou Downtown Ski Festival.

    February 15 Caribou Snowmobile Club Hot Dog Roast ITS 105 Stockholm starting 10 a.m.

    February 15 Portage Lakers Pie Auction 7 p.m. at Deans.

    February 28-March 7 Youth/Junior World Championship Biathalon Nordic Heritage Ctr., Presque Isle.”

    Thank you Kathy for your dedication year after year to snow sledding trails reports for Northern Maine.

    Proving, driving home the point we don’t hibernate winters in Northern Maine. Like the other three seasons we are outdoors. All year round.

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