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This post was buried in an older thread. I feel so proud of it I want
it up front. It's about a recent experience I had in Downeast Maine. *** I already have an amusing anecdote about fishing (or not fishing) in the region. When I was up in November for the home inspection, I had a Saturday stayover on my frequent-flyer ticket, so I decided to find a place to fish, preferrably for trout. Now one feature of Maine fisheries is that most moving water is closed from October until Spring, so I only had a few places to choose from. I went and bought a Delorme Atlas, a fishing license, a bright orange hat (they hunt up there), and some bear spray (just in case). I mapped out a route from Machias where I was staying (Hello Broadway B &B) to a promising flowage between routes 1 and 9 in Washington County, North of Cherryfield, if anyone know where that is. Oh, I need to tell you that the jokers at Bangor Airport gave me a convertable car to rent when I left Bangor. The sad thing is that at first I was excited about it- excited to get a convertable car- in Maine- in November. So anyway, I took Route 1 (the main route along the coast) about halfway there, but there was this great meandering path through the wild blueberry fields, which Delorme said was paved. I had a full tank of gas, water, beer, and my lunch in the car, and it was 8:00 am, so onto the meandering path I went. The road was enjoyable albeit somewhat monotonous. Occasionally I passed a house or a barn, but mostly it was scrub and blueberry fields, some with large boulders stranded in the fields from the last glacier that went through. Everything was going great until I climbed up a long hill where the fields dropped off on both sides. I came down the hill and was in the middle of a vast field that was level into the distance. Then the road became dirt. At first it was well packed dirt, so I went on. Keep going, I thought, the road is straight and the pavement will pick up again. Then the road ended in a T. I had to turn. I turned north.?. (My destination was north-west). I kept going; sooner or later I had to find a road that was on the atlas. One turn turned to two which turned to twenty, and I was lost . . . lost in Blueberry fields. It is hard to describe how extensive they are, but on the map they are probably 15 miles by 30 miles square. What could I do? I kept driving, field after field, turn after turn for two hours. Alone except for the radio, no sign of humanity other than the road. After two hours, miracle of miracles, I saw an SUV coming down the road coming toward me. Now the dirt path was narrow, so we would both have to slow down and pull to the side to pass. I could see that the driver was about to nod and pull past, so I rolled down my window and waved my arms frantically. He stopped, lowered his window, looked me up and down, and said in a ringing down east accent, "You picked a pretty fine car for running around in the blueberries fields." I had to smile at that comment. I had no choice, I stuck in the middle of the blueberry wilderness. Without his help I may be stuck forever. I quickly described my plight, and asked him to guide my out of the fields. He said to turn around and follow him, which I did. We took innumerable turns, went past a lake, and down and up a gully where I also got stuck. After about twenty minutes we were on hard packed dirt, approaching a paved road. He stopped at the intersection with the paved road, and I pulled around him to thank him for the help. Before I could open my mouth, he pointed his arm out his window, past my car and said, "The road to the Bangor Airport is that way." I thanked him and went on my way. Of course, I wasn't going to the airport, but he figured that after getting lost so dumbly, I couldn't be from around there and would probably benefit from leaving as quickly as possible. Lessons learned: Maine is big, and Eastern Maine is more rural than you can imagine, probably more rural than any other place east of the Mississippi. Blueberry farms in Maine are big. Roads in Maine end abruptly. Finally, the only way to be sure where you are is to have a GPS. I didn't get to fish that day, but I am not discouraged. I am moving to an area with much wilderness- more every year, and I will enjoy exploring it. |
#2
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I enjoyed your story. It reminded me of my college days at the
University of Maine at Orono when we would explore all those woods roads on weekends to see where they went. Sometimes we would hunt pah-tridge and rabbit, sometimes we would ice fish, but the driving was half the fun. Pete Collin |
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Hey Peter; I went to UMO. Did we have this conversation a few years ago?
--riverman "Peter A. Collin" wrote in message ... I enjoyed your story. It reminded me of my college days at the University of Maine at Orono when we would explore all those woods roads on weekends to see where they went. Sometimes we would hunt pah-tridge and rabbit, sometimes we would ice fish, but the driving was half the fun. Pete Collin |
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riverman wrote:
Hey Peter; I went to UMO. Did we have this conversation a few years ago? --riverman "Peter A. Collin" wrote in message ... I enjoyed your story. It reminded me of my college days at the University of Maine at Orono when we would explore all those woods roads on weekends to see where they went. Sometimes we would hunt pah-tridge and rabbit, sometimes we would ice fish, but the driving was half the fun. Pete Collin Oh, Maybe. I tend to repeat myself. Graduated '91. |
#5
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![]() "Peter A. Collin" wrote in message ... riverman wrote: Hey Peter; I went to UMO. Did we have this conversation a few years ago? --riverman "Peter A. Collin" wrote in message ... I enjoyed your story. It reminded me of my college days at the University of Maine at Orono when we would explore all those woods roads on weekends to see where they went. Sometimes we would hunt pah-tridge and rabbit, sometimes we would ice fish, but the driving was half the fun. Pete Collin Oh, Maybe. I tend to repeat myself. Graduated '91. December, '84. Worked in Boardman for the Geology department before Steve Kahl built the new labs out by Stillwater Village (near the Cabins field: you missed the Cabins era). --riverman |
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![]() December, '84. Worked in Boardman for the Geology department before Steve Kahl built the new labs out by Stillwater Village (near the Cabins field: you missed the Cabins era). --riverman Cabin field is where they Held Bumstock the first 4 years. I heard that they tore down the Ram's Horn - my favorite coffee house ever. |
#7
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Thanks Petah I appreciate your comments. Good to know that there are
former Mainers on the board. |
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Memphis Jim wrote:
I didn't get to fish that day, but I am not discouraged. I am moving to an area with much wilderness- more every year, and I will enjoy exploring it. Cool story. What does "much wilderness - more every year" mean? I didn't think that was happening anywhere. Willi |
#9
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![]() "Willi" wrote in message ... Memphis Jim wrote: I didn't get to fish that day, but I am not discouraged. I am moving to an area with much wilderness- more every year, and I will enjoy exploring it. Cool story. What does "much wilderness - more every year" mean? I didn't think that was happening anywhere. Willi It's what happens when you quit mowing the back forty. Danl |
#10
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There are several long term trends that are making parts of Maine, and
parts of other states in the northern U.S. have more wilderness. In the case of Maine, much of the state used to support a small farm economy when the U.S. was much more agrarian than it is now. Now in most of Maine, smaller farms are not economically productive (with the exception of Aroostook County in the northeast of the state where potato farms predominate). Over the past hundred years, much of interior Maine that used to be farmland has reverted back to woods. At the same time, over the last 40 years or so the population of the state has consolidated toward coast, toward the southwest, and toward urban areas, such that there are towns throughout Maine that are slowly dimming and blinking out. Close to where I will be living there is one town that no longer exists as a coporate entity, Centerville, and two others that are trying to go in that direction, Whitneyville, and Cooper (on Cathance Lake) Deorganization means lower taxes for these towns on the brink. When deorganization succeeds, local control of the community is given up. This ultimately furthers the trend toward forested land. Finally, much of the land in Maine is owned by international timber companies. Currently they are managing much of the land for pulp production, and letting forests regrow. If you didn't know better you might assume much of the land is preserved. The town where I am buying a house once had about 2500 people and was an industrial center for cutting wood (thorough water power). Now the mills are gone, along with the dams (thank goodness). If you didn't know the history of the town it would be hard to imagine how industrial the town was in the past. That is what I meant. |
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