Road Trip to Downeast Maine

In some respects, once you get off Interstate 95 and onto Route 1 heading north through Maine, it feels like you’ve been dropped back in time. The houses get farther apart, the fields more rock strewn, and the cars on the road and people fewer. The Northern Appalachian Mountain region and adjacent well-known rocky coast of Maine is breathtaking in natural beauty. What the glaciers carved, pushed, and molded as they advanced into what is now the Bay of Fundy is raw and magnificent.

After reading about Lubec, Maine – dubbed the most easterly town in the continental U.S. – we decided to pack a few glad rags, our pal Harry (the dog), and head due north to see it for ourselves. The timing was perfect. With family duties temporarily suspended in that lull between summer activities and the start of the new school year, we left the protective bubble of life in Mattapoisett and took off to see what we could see. What we saw filled us with mixed emotions.

There are vast stretches along Route 1 in Washington County that speak of a by-gone time. Gothic revival homes sit next to fallow pastures growing weeds and wildflowers as the houses – in their various stages of shedding life for dust – crumble and blow away. Few of the older buildings show any signs of recent activity. Once lovely curved decorative wooden swags and long porches tip down and down again as gravity pulls them to a final resting place. Even the brilliant hopeful sun and glistening blue skies did not illuminate any possibilities – only loss. People have fled the land. It cannot support a prosperous farm economy in a world where industrialized agriculture rules. Small family farms are no longed needed or wanted. Our northern rural America is shadowed with abandonment.

We drove on with hope that once we reached Lubec, the feeling of loss would lift and fly away on a gull’s wing. Along the way, we were gifted with coastal scenes that filled our field of vision to perfection. For me, almost nothing is more spiritually satisfying than a view of the ocean, especially here in New England. I’ve seen the Pacific Coast, the Gulf Coast, and the Atlantic Coast clear down to Key West. Yes, those watery views are all grand. But for me, with these northern waters coursing through my DNA, there is nowhere else quite as splendid. Harsh, but splendid.

We drove into Lubec girded in the knowledge that it was a quiet place near the Canadian border offering views of dramatic tidal swings. Once you arrive via Route 189 into the heart of this tiny town, there is a narrow street that sweeps along the shoreline and away again aptly named Water Street. From here, the land slowly rises from the high tide mark to a height of 50 feet or more giving the homes situated on the bluffs magnificent sightlines to the Atlantic. The tide was coming in when we arrived. The current created small wavelets and eddies, like tiny whirlpools, and held a steady-as-she-goes purpose as it has since time out of mind.

It was a very long drive from Mattapoisett to Lubec. With only a couple of rest stops for us travelers, coupled with some navigational challenges, it still took a little over nine hours before we parked and climbed the three flights of stairs to our room at the inn. Upon opening the door, we were rewarded with a rush of fresh salt air filling the room from an open window that faced the oncoming sea. And there before our windshield-weary eyes, we beheld the Bay of Fundy. The tides here are some of the most dramatic in the world, scaling and descending 20 and 30 feet twice a day.

With the incoming tide, the small baitfish were pulled along, followed by seals that bobbed in leisurely dining preoccupation. Their heads glistened like black onyx, their eyes scanned the grassy knoll where a handful of tourists (us included) oohed and aahed over the sea creatures while the residents went about their business, unfazed by the sight of large sea mammals in their natural environment versus in an aquarium. The sleek swimmers weren’t more than 250 feet from us. So close, and yet so far away, in these cold north Atlantic waters.

That night as Harry settled into the unfamiliar scented surroundings and Paul, my husband, finally rested after hours behind the wheel, I wondered how residents of the area survive living in a place with such stunning economic depression. Did the beauty and quiet make up for the worry of keeping the home fires burning and the family fed during long winter months? I would later learn that the median household income is right around $30,000 a year.

Tourism is, of course, high on the list. Maine’s license plates usually bear the word ‘Vacationland.’ And there are the obvious industries such as paper mills, shipbuilding and fishing. Collectively, however, these industries barely support the needs of its aging population, which is reported to be the oldest of any other state. Young people have been leaving Maine for decades in search of higher wages and a more comfortable lifestyle.

Maine’s slogan is ‘The Pine Tree State’ and certainly the vast unspoiled forests of the Northern Appalachian Mountains are testimonies to that truth. Its motto is Dirigo, which translated from Latin means “I direct or I guide.” The founding fathers thought this motto significant, for they believed Maine knew what was best for its prosperity and safety. That sentiment holds true today in spite of economic realities that have plagued the state since its birth.

Maine has had a few very good decades, but generally speaking it has lagged behind the rest of the states in terms of personal wealth and economic growth. The University of Southern Maine prepared a study for the Brookings Institute (csc@usm.edu.eduThe Maine Economy: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow by Charles Colgan) in 2006 that points back from Maine’s history to present conditions, drawing conclusions that were intended to aid the state with its economic recovery. Alas, that has yet to really happen.

What the study pointed out is that Maine overall needs to embrace the reality that old industries can’t support population growth and sustain it, that it isn’t really sustaining an aging population whose needs are increasing not decreasing. Technology-driven businesses, finance, health care versus manufacturing, logging, farming and fishing are the future the study reported. I read it to mean that Maine needs to come up at least to the 20th century. It doesn’t want to. And in my heart, I don’t think I want it to either.

I want to go to places like downeast Maine and feel the quiet drape around my shoulders. I want to watch the lobster fishermen toss their lines out in the dawn and return with enough catch to support their families at the end of the day. I want to feel as the Roosevelt family did … that this place on earth restored one’s soul and allowed one’s thoughts to ebb and flow with the tides without a five bar connection to the world.

As we find ourselves swallowed up in the pace of modern life, even here in Mattapoisett, we need places like Lubec to bring us back to ourselves. Even though the sad images of shuttered buildings, empty Main Street storefronts, decaying farmhouses and weather-beaten spirits prevail in this region, I believe we still need the slowed-down pace lest we flame out as a species. But then again, what do I know. Or maybe it is just my poetic side that believes all of that. And yet, I can’t stop thinking about the people.

On the last evening of our visit as I walked Harry around the tiny village square, we were swarmed by a group of little girls. The kids were gathered at this location because a very tired looking Masonic Lodge was holding an annual barbeque and live music event. A few hardy locals sat at picnic benches stationed outside the lodge building as a duo attempted a few Beatles songs – their desire to attain harmony was challenged, but no one seemed to care. After each song, the fifteen or so attendees clapped warmly.

My new friends had too much energy to sit around. They were fascinated with Harry, wanting nothing more than to fluff his soft coat and ask me questions about where I was from and what kind of dog Mr. H was. Most shared stories of being bitten by a dog or wanting a dog or how much trouble their dog caused, all the while interrupting one another and vying for my eye contact. I’ve seen this before, children eager for an adult to simply listen to them with undivided attention. And so I gave it to them and received in return their innocent warmth.

I asked them where they were from, what they wanted to be when they grew up, and what they did in the wintertime. Every single one of those precious little girls said they planned to leave the area when they got out of high school. Not one of them said they would stay living in the area. When asked if they thought the place was pretty they said yes, but … they needed to work some place else. One child said in a voice that sounded very old and tired, “…it’s just too hard here.”

On our last morning, Harry and I were once again outside walking. An older gentleman drove up and parked beside the postage stamp sized park where we had watched the seals. He opened the trunk and removed gardening tools. He filled his watering can and proceeded towards a barrel filled with glorious annuals. These barrels and other flower containers were positioned all around the village, even in front of closed-up shops, which added to the contrast of renewal versus decay.

We exchanged pleasantries and he told me he was responsible for all the flowers in town: buying them, caring for them, it was his project. He said, “The locals would never do this – they have other things they need to spend their money on, like food…” He was not a local; he was a summer resident, one that fled each winter to Palm Springs, California. He told me that non-locals were called “PFAs” by the townies. That stands for “people from away.” I asked if the local economy subsisted on tourism and lobster fishing. He said yes and went on to say, “…but barely, they couldn’t even keep the nursing home open or the health care clinic, those are now located in Eastport (a small city about 38 miles away by road or about 2.5 miles by boat on a good day when the ferry can shuttle back and forth).” We nodded together in acknowledgment that that was a sad commentary on the area. I wished him a good day and went back to the room with a view.

We had taken in the sights of Lubec and Campobello Island, concurring that the natural splendor was intact, but my heart was heavy for the people who live there: the townies and more importantly, the kids. They need and want the income generated from the PFAs that migrate there each summer, but resent them at the same time.

I wondered why the area was called ‘downeast’ and found this on the internet from Down East Magazine: “When ships sailed from Boston to ports in Maine (which were to the east of Boston), the wind was at their backs, so they were sailing downwind, hence the term ‘Down East.’”From now on, there will always be special place in my heart for this place and its people.

My take away is this: I want to hold onto the memory of the seals sliding like blue indigo silk across black velvet waters in the rising tide and that lone eagle we saw on the beach at Campobello. I’d rather remember those little girls frozen in time when youth flushed their cheeks, and hope – though believed to be hiding in locations anywhere but at home in Lubec – still buoyed their dreams of a better life to come as they skipped away from me to play tag. In that heartbeat, I wanted to shelter them all from the harsh realities of life.

And all those sagging shapeless houses, I’d rather think of them as black and white postcards from the past that may yet have a future, a tomorrow. Maybe one day, the free market economy will find a way to make such forlorn places viable homes where the townie’s sons and daughters will want to stay and raise their own families, not finding themselves instead just bits of flotsam and jetsam like so many others have done.

By Marilou Newell

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“Books ‘n’ More” Sale

The Friends of Plumb Library will be holding their annual “Books ‘n’ More” Sale on Saturday, September 6 from 9:00 am to 3:00 pm at the First Congregational Church Fellowship Hall at 11 Constitution Way, Rochester. The Friends Preview sale will take place on Friday, September 5 from 6:00 – 8:00 pm at the Church Hall. We are seeking donations of used books, DVDs, CDs, games, or puzzles. Donations can be left at the library until 8:00 pm on Thursday, September 4. Volunteers are needed on Friday, September 5 to pack and move the books to the church hall, unpack and set up, and to work on the day of the sale. Volunteers are rewarded with a 50% discount on their purchases. For more information or to sign up to work at the sale, call the library at 508-763-8600 or email info@plumblibrary.com.

Hunters of History

Bob St. Onge of Rochester and Tom Smith of East Wareham have shared a passion for treasure hunting with their metal detectors since 1972. Together, they have found some pretty curious and fascinating bits of history along the way, too.

On August 20, the two men gave a metal detector search demonstration to the Rochester Historical Society and also brought along with them some of their favorite finds from various locations they have visited in the past.

These artifacts included an English colonial halfpenny dating back to 1745, a Texas bus token from the 1950s, and various colonial shoe buckles and other miscellaneous items and coins. Historical Society members with an equal passion for relics from the past marveled at the found objects and eagerly anticipated the two men to start scanning the grounds of the Old East Rochester Church that evening to see what they could find for the Historical Society to treasure for future generations.

“We wanted to offer our service to the Rochester Historical Society to find anything at the site to become part of the museum,” said St. Onge.

Scanning historical locations and sites are of particular interest to the two men, who say, if invited, they would even scan your property for free and let you keep whatever they find.

“We always say it’s like fishing,” said Smith. “You catch a big bass and then you throw it back in.” He said it’s all about the hunt and the chase. “That’s the biggest part of it,” said Smith.

Smith and St. Onge consider themselves “metal detector hobbyists” and have partnered up together during many a find. They even share a business card with both of their names on it. They go on hunts to various locations locally and patiently scan the area until they hear those bleepy sounds signifying the location of something metal, and perhaps something precious.

“I’ve found a few really nice rings and a couple gold chains,” said Smith. He said one of the most exciting finds was years ago on Staten Island when his metal detector started sounding, leading to the discovery of a European gold coin, laying right where it was dropped, probably a century ago. “I was really amazed,” added Smith.

That evening during the search at the church, there were no gold coins or buried treasure, per se. But the men did turn up an old metal door hinge, like one that might have hinged a large door to an old barn, as well as an old bent penny and a hunk of iron, all for the Historical Society to keep. Like Smith said before, it is all about the excitement of the hunt rather than the monetary value of the items he finds.

The two men are both retired and say now they have the time to spend enjoying their hobby – and they are always looking for new places to take their metal detectors to hunt for hidden, historical, or lost objects.

“It’s just one of those enjoyable hobbies,” said Smith. “That is, if you don’t mind getting dirty every once in a while.”

If you have a historical site or a piece of property that you think would be fun or interesting to have scanned for metal objects – for free, the two men add – then why not invite Relics Plus Metal Detecting Services and their metal detectors to come check it out?

You can reach Tom Smith and Bob St. Onge at thomassmith419@comcast.net or vett1967@comcast.net, respectively – and afterwards, don’t forget to contact us at The Wanderer to report what you find at news@wanderer.com!

By Jean Perry

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Marion Democratic Town Committee

The Marion Democratic Town Committee will meet Saturday, September 20 at 10:00 am at the Music Hall, 164 Front Street, Marion.

State Representative Bill Straus, Chairman of the Joint Committee on Transportation, and State Senator Marc Pacheco will be guest speakers. Transportation and its significance in keeping Massachusetts competitive in the national and global economy, and why the state needs funding to fix our roads and bridges will be the main topic. Also, a representative from the Committee for Safer Roads and Bridges will address the importance of Question 1 on the statewide ballot.

For more information, call 508-748-1282. Guests are always welcome.

Call For Artists

New Bedford Open Studio (NBOS) has a great deal to celebrate after ten years of providing exciting city-wide open studio events. What started out as a holiday studio sale at 21 Cove Street has grown into multiple open studio dates each year. Throughout the year, NBOS members are involved with many creative endeavors throughout New Bedford. To have even more of a presence throughout the year, NBOS has just signed on as an AHA! programming partner. Mediumstudio in New Bedford has given NBOS a new look for our next decade by redesigning the NBOS website, which can be seen at http://www.newbedfordopenstudios.org/. This new site not only has information on how to navigate the fall Open Studios Events, but it also provides an important cultural link to artists and art events throughout the year.

This year there are two open studio weekends planned. The first will be the weekend of October 4 – 5 at NBOS South Celebration and Sale at the Orchard and Kilburn Street Studio Buildings. NBOS North Celebration and Sale and Open Studios will take place on November 21 – 23 at Hatch Street Studios and Ropeworks Studios.

All artists who live, work or have exhibited their work in New Bedford are invited to participate in NBOS events and shows by becoming members. Some of the additional benefits to membership include an individual website page with space for multiple images as well as your artist information and resume and invitations to social and educational events. Membership applications are available on the NBOS website under the “join NBOS” tab. The fee for a yearly membership is $50 if paid by September 1 and $60 after September 1. Payments and applications can be submitted on the NBOS website or can be mailed to: New Bedford Open Studios/SFSEMA, 695 Pleasant St., P.O. Box 8276, New Bedford, MA 02742. For more information, call Karen Snyder at 508-287-8477.

Swift Motion for Solar Farm Approval

It took almost two years and a lawsuit against the Town before Dale and Laura Briggs could move forward with their plan to construct a solar farm on their County Road property, and on August 21, with no further discussion, the Marion ZBA passed a unanimous motion to grant the variance, giving the green light to begin construction.

The couple, who sat with Luke Hinkle of My Generation Energy, smilingly turned to look at each other once the vote was taken, ending a significant history of denials and delay. After the meeting adjourned, the couple took turns exchanging smiles and handshakes with the ZBA members.

“Once it got [to the ZBA] it moved along,” said Ms. Briggs to board member Betsy Dunn.

“Well, I’m sorry we couldn’t do it from the get-go,” Dunn told Briggs. “Good luck.”

Also during the meeting, Ken Steen on behalf of Baywatch Realty asked the board for a few changes to the Village Drive development site plan, including the addition of a central mailbox within the development.

Since plans were approved, the U.S. Postal Service has changed its policy regarding new neighborhoods, doing away with curbside mailboxes and now requiring one centralized mailbox.

Steen proposed a location approximately 200 feet beyond the Route 105 entrance to the development, avoiding putting the mailbox too close to the “very, very busy” entrance.

The spot Steen recommended is a flat, green area with enough turn-around room for the mail truck, which Steen said the Postmaster approved.

Also representing Baywatch Realty, Ed Gless presented some grading changes to an area near the hammerhead cul-de-sac, which slopes down toward a pond. Some retaining walls will be eliminated from the plan as well.

Chairman Eric Pierce asked whether or not the changes would have to go through the Conservation Commission, and Steen answered yes.

“Because it’s so insignificant, nothing changes in the drainage,” said Steen. “They should just embrace it without altering the order of conditions.”

Pierce suggested continuing the matter in order to have an independent engineering consultant review the proposed revisions before issuing approval.

“I’m not a full-blown engineer, and I just want to make sure the Town’s best interests are being kept.”

Steen said the revised plan is a “far better situation” and a better option, calling it “strictly a grading issue.”

“Initially, it makes sense to me,” said Pierce, “but I am not an engineer who can magically understand all of that.

The board decided to hold off voting on either proposed revision until the next meeting.

In other matters, Anthi Frangiadis presented plans to raze an existing garage and build a larger two-car garage at the 76 Pleasant Street property of Wayne and Teresa Mattson.

The location of the new detached garage to be constructed will be shifted slightly away from the edge of the property line, making the nonconforming lot layout   somewhat less nonconforming. The existing site of the garage is 20 by 22 feet, and the new garage will be 27 feet, 6 inches by 24 feet.

ZBA member Dunn recused herself from voting but continued on to speak in favor of the matter “as an abutter.” The request was approved.

The next meeting of the Marion Zoning Board of Appeals will be September 25 at 7:30 pm at the Marion Town House.

By Jean Perry

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Marion Council on Aging

Take the AARP Driver Safety Classroom Course! Learn proven safety strategies to maintain your confidence behind the wheel. This course is offered on Wednesday September 24 from 10:00 am – 3:00 pm at the Marion Police Station. Bring a bag lunch and please arrive before 9:45 am to fill out class certificate. There is a $15 charge for AARP members and $20 for non-AARP members. Please call the COA office to register at 508 748-3570.

Check out the monthly movies at the Music Hall at 7:00 pm. Free admission and popcorn. On September 12, Double Indemnity will be shown. Preregistration is not needed.

Lunch and Learn will begin again in October. This event is offered on the first Wednesday of the month at noon at the Marion Police Station. Free and preregistration is not needed. Bring your lunch. In October, come learn about the pros and cons of obtaining a reverse mortgage.

Low impact aerobics are offered every Monday and Friday at the Atlantis Drive facility from 9:30 – 10:30 am for $4 per class.

Mattapoisett Friends Fundraising

Donations of high end antiques, Oriental rugs, fine art, important paper collectibles, sterling and gold are being sought by Mattapoisett Friends Meeting as part of its fundraising efforts to restore its historic meeting house.

Frank McNamee of the Marion Antique Shop has agreed to handle the sale of vetted items at its annual November auction. A mid-September deadline has been set for this particular sale. Vetting will be done by Mr. McNamee.

A receipt for income tax purposes, for the full value of any item sold, will be given the donor by the church.

Mr. McNamee is also helping the cause by reducing the seller’s commission by half for which the meeting is grateful.

Two donations have already been accepted. One is an 1871 scrapbook with articles pasted over a partial logbook of the New Bedford whaling ship Courier, covering the last part of a voyage begun in 1829. Two articles in the scrapbook deal with President Abraham Lincoln’s assassination.

Another is a type of metate, called a grinding stone or grinding slab, carved by pre-Columbian Mayans from one piece of stone. It is accompanied by two mano stones, hand-held carved stones for grinding corn and other grains.

To date, the Friends Meeting has raised more than $82,000 toward the estimated $245,000 restoration project. Phase 1 of the work is expected to begin next month.

For more information, call Brad Hathaway at 508-758-3579.

ORRHS Welcoming Four Exchange Students

The Old Rochester Regional High School community is welcoming four foreign exchange students into its halls this year. Antione Geller, 18, from Belgium, and Elena Voigt, 17, from Germany, are studying at ORR through the Cultural Homestay International exchange program. Two more students will be joining ORR from the AFS program – Paola Briceno Sanchez, 16, from Mexico, and Marianela Belmonte, 16, from Argentina. The AFS students won’t arrive in America until September 8 due to late house placement, but they will be welcomed into the ORR community soon thereafter. The Cultural Homestay International students, on the other hand, have had some time to settle into their new homes in the Tri-Town. Elena Voigt arrived here from Germany on August 19. Since then, she has been getting to know her host family in Rochester, managing a five-hour jetlag, and taking in her new surroundings. “I haven’t even realized that I’m here yet,” said Voigt after the new student orientation at ORR last Friday. While being immersed in a new country can be overwhelming, Voigt is still looking forward to being a student at ORR, meeting new people, and joining the school’s cross country team. The Clancys, Voigt’s host family, are excited about the year to come. Holly Clancy and her daughter, Alyssa Clancy, a sixth grade student at Rochester Memorial School, attended ORR’s orientation along with Voigt. Holly Clancy said she hopes to “blend” with Voigt, learning about her German culture as Voigt learns about American culture. The family already has some trips planned to allow Voigt to experience as much of America as possible; they’ll be visiting Florida, New York City, Boston, and even Canada over the next year. Clancy first considered hosting a foreign exchange student when she met Louisa Truss, an exchange student from Germany that attended ORR last year. Truss was a student aid in Clancy’s class at the ORR preschool. “I got talking to Louisa and just loved her,” said Clancy, “and I thought it’d be great to have an exchange student live with us.” After filling out a sizable application and passing a home visit and a background check, the Clancy family was approved to host a student. The next step was to choose their new family member from a list of applicants. “We wanted someone that liked to ride horses, because my daughter does, and Elena was the first one [Cultural Homestay International] sent us,” Clancy recalled. “Just reading through everything about her, I felt that she was perfect for our family.” The Clancys are just one of four families in the Tri-Town who have decided to welcome an exchange student into their home. Kim Corazzini, the AFS club advisor at ORR, is pleased to have such a good turnout this year. She noted that finding host families each year can be very difficult. “It’s always a struggle, which is sad, because I think when people do [host], it’s very gratifying,” said Corazzini, adding that she does admit that this gratifying experience is a big commitment. On the national level, the AFS program has also seen struggles. “It’s been a very difficult year for them to place kids,” said Corazzini. Thankful to have four exchange students this year, Corazzini is looking forward to immersing them in the ORR community. She hopes to hold an AFS club welcome social for the exchange students to meet their American peers soon after the school year starts. “The kids become very fascinated with it because they meet friends; they learn about people from different countries,” she said. Corazzini also looks forward to the opportunities the exchange students will have to learn about American culture. She noted that it is not a common practice in other countries for students to have a graduation ceremony or a senior prom. Culturally, these are some of the differences the exchange students can experience at ORR. “What we like to do is to have them have an opportunity to experience the things that are particular to the United States,” she said. As the school year is just beginning, the exchange students have a lot to look forward to. Through joining the ORR community, they’ll share their culture while learning about ours. If your family is interested in hosting an exchange student, either this year or in future years, please visit www.afsusa.org/host-family for more information. By Renae Reints ORRexchangestudents082814

Housing Authority Board Vacancy

The Mattapoisett Housing Authority Board is eager to fill a mid-term vacancy. Any town resident with an interest in the welfare and safety of our local state housing facility is encouraged to write a letter of intent to Louise Sousa at 1 Acushnet Road, Mattapoisett, MA 02739.