Recent comments in /f/Maine
OrganizationGreedy29 t1_jeb33q1 wrote
Reply to "In the summer of 1955, when my father was 8 years old, he won 5 acres of Maine lakefront property in a Davy Crockett cartoon coloring contest." by GlobeOpinion
You hear that, millennials? Stop buying avocado toast and start buying crayons.
ragtopponygirl t1_jeb0z77 wrote
Reply to comment by ragtopponygirl in My painting of Mattawamkeag river, oils by cerrvine
Oh, very nice btw!
ragtopponygirl t1_jeb0wn0 wrote
Reply to comment by Indybin in My painting of Mattawamkeag river, oils by cerrvine
Speaking of...is that oil? I don't have a refined eye, yet.
nogzila t1_jeazyiz wrote
Reply to Working in Healthcare in Maine by Total-Win-7687
One of the places my wife has looked into for when she transitions out of healthcare eventually is Jackson laboratory. Easy to transition to and in a beautiful spot.
Bar Harbor
Tight_Procedure t1_jeaykfz wrote
Reply to comment by indyaj in Drama in the woods? by burneruser_67
I once looked up from my book to see a bear looking in the window, right above my "guard" dogs' heads as they slept through the whole thing.
AccomplishedPenalty4 t1_jeay4wy wrote
Imagine_Gravity_0007 t1_jeay1ej wrote
TitleExciting5397 t1_jeaxcfw wrote
Reply to Moving to Old Orchard Beach! by CalligrapherNo7790
you will need a car to get to Portland to get to grocery stories and the like. its 25~ minutes with no traffic and tolls on I-95. Maine is hard living without a car if you don't live on peninsula in Portland. We have a big lack of public transportation in the state.
​
If you don't like the schools, try looking into something closer to Saco or Scarborough.
bluerock456 t1_jeawutq wrote
Reply to Unity college by MickyW98
Don't do it, Unitys in bad shape
bluerock456 t1_jeawmpc wrote
Reply to comment by A-roguebanana in Unity college by MickyW98
That dude turned what was going to be a simple fluff piece article into an embarrassing expose due to his stupidity and arrogance.
Asheby t1_jeawc01 wrote
Reply to comment by bellarexnalajon in Is Yorks wild Kingdom bad news? by SameProfession254
I believe they are a rehab facility, so animals are released when/if well. Last time I went, it looked like some improvements had been made. (Used to go annually when I taught summer school.)
I could be wrong, though.
TitleExciting5397 t1_jeaw6pz wrote
Reply to comment by lakeside20233 in Would I get arrested for uninspected vehicle? by OkamiGoddess23
I went 3.5 years without inspection parking in Portland all day every. Finally go it inspected but never had a ticket or nothing.
Character_Screen_265 t1_jeavki8 wrote
Reply to comment by DirigoBlu in Drama in the woods? by burneruser_67
I used to live in a much more densely populated area (although still considered rural) and I always had neighbor drama to report to my husband during the workday. Since I’ve move to “the woods” most of my text messages have revolved around turkeys, deer, and moose. What makes the limited incidents that occur out here so remarkable is that they are so remarkable and rare 😂. The stuff that makes police log news out here wouldn’t even be on police logs in more densely populated areas.
Earthling1a t1_jeavcf2 wrote
Reply to comment by bbpr120 in "In the summer of 1955, when my father was 8 years old, he won 5 acres of Maine lakefront property in a Davy Crockett cartoon coloring contest." by GlobeOpinion
It's clear you've never experienced one of my turkey sandwich, cole slaw and baked bean farts.
DaytonaDemon t1_jeauutj wrote
Reply to comment by Imagine_Gravity_0007 in "In the summer of 1955, when my father was 8 years old, he won 5 acres of Maine lakefront property in a Davy Crockett cartoon coloring contest." by GlobeOpinion
The coloring contest that changed my father’s life, and didn’t
By Liz Brown
In the summer of 1955, when my father was 8 years old, he won 5 acres of lakefront property in a Davy Crockett cartoon coloring contest.
The contest was sponsored by Hood Milk and the now defunct Boston Post and was open to children ages 13 and under. Weekly winners, announced throughout the summer, were offered a variety of smaller prizes, including flannel shirts and Little Golden Books. Second place was a set of dinnerware by “unusual ceramicist” Sacha Barton, and third was an 8mm camera. The grand prize was the land on Lake Mooselookmeguntick in Rangeley, Maine, and it came with a prefabricated Davy Crockett cabin and playhouse to be delivered to the property by flatbed truck.
My grandmother, a visual artist with a degree in painting and drawing from Boston University, had reportedly frowned at my father’s entry, saying it was too plain and not flashy enough to catch the judges’ eyes. “Some kids put glitter on theirs,” my father said, recalling his competitors’ desperate moves. “Davy Crockett didn’t wear glitter.”
Upon hearing the news of my father’s impressive win, a neighbor offered $50 for the property — or about $485 today. My father said no.
At such a young age, my father already knew what it meant to own a piece of property — and what it meant not to.
His family had no home. His father, whom I never met, had left my father, his older brother, and my grandmother when my father was an infant, fleeing to California to start a new family. My father and his mother and brother moved into my grandparents’ three-bedroom house in West Roxbury in 1948.
That was where he plotted his future — he would become a soldier, like Davy Crockett, until he retired to his cabin in the woods. The Army would be his family, stable and structured, with clear-cut rules and chains of command. The Army was a family that would never break apart.
I don’t remember when I first started hearing about “the land,” but we went to visit it when I was around 8 years old myself. Lot 13 was on a dirt road in thick woods, and it was pure, untouched woodland. There was no path to the water, so we crept over fallen branches and wild brush to get to the small piece of lakefront. The water was choppy and rough, but the shore was covered with smooth rocks. I picked one up to keep with me and lost it in one of the many moves we made for Dad’s career in the military.
For reasons no one can quite remember, my grandmother never followed up on the other prize, the prefab cabin and playhouse.
“She really blew it not getting that cabin up there,” my father often said when I was growing up. “It’s too late now.”
Throughout his life, Dad toyed with realtors, checking in on the property’s estimated sale price every couple of years and then slamming down the phone in a rage over an inadequate offer.
In 1994, a few years after he separated from my mother, he moved to a tiny cabin on Mount Washington in New Hampshire. It made no sense to me then, but when I look at a map now, I see that it was a direct drive to the lake in Maine. He was trying to get closer to the land.
When I was 26 years old and living in Los Angeles, my mother called, frantic. I needed to fly home immediately, she said. My father was surely dying, and I had to say my goodbyes. He had suffered a massive hematoma. Doctors were unsure if it was due to an old head injury he’d suffered from a rocket-propelled grenade in Vietnam or if he had fallen while hiking alone and had forgotten about it.
It was the day before Christmas Eve. I purchased an outrageously expensive plane ticket and was at his bedside the next morning. He was conscious but altered, shaking his head from side to side. The first thing he said to me was “Lizzie . . . no less than $300,000.”
I knew what he meant right away. The land was at the forefront of his mind even on his presumed death bed. His price was triple what others in the neighborhood were asking for their land, but I just said, “OK, Dad.”
“It’s lakefront,” he said, before drifting off for the briefest of sleeps.
My father didn’t die that day.
He worked for months in physical therapy and seemed mostly recovered a year later, but his fantasy of building his own cabin on the land faded. He was broke. He moved back in with my mother, taking over the living room couch.
In late 2019, a few months before COVID-19 hit, Dad was diagnosed with Agent Orange lymphoma. Nearly two years of chemotherapy didn’t help. “Time is short,” the doctors told my parents.
My mother, who rarely spoke up about anything, was concerned — both of my grandmothers had lost all they had to the state when they went into nursing facilities. “You better sign that land over to the girls right now,” she warned my father.
And so, after 67 years of holding on, he let the land go. Word spread that the coloring contest kid had given up his land. The pandemic real estate boom had already reached rural Maine. Three months after he signed the land over to my sister and me, a real estate agent called about a buyer. We all had expenses. My parents’ house was in need of repair. I was raising a disabled child in an expensive city. My sister was on the verge of making her own art business profitable and needed help getting over the hump. We negotiated a price, exchanged paperwork and signatures, and it was gone.
I look at the photo of my father, his mother, and brother beaming with joy back in 1955 at the coloring contest awards ceremony. I want to hold on to this moment where they all look so happy, even though I know the rest of the story. We’ve all known plenty of loss. It’s nice to look back and see us win.
Character_Screen_265 t1_jeauug2 wrote
Reply to comment by dr0wningggg in Drama in the woods? by burneruser_67
Now that I know more about what can happen to people when their livestock escapes (civil violations, restitutions for damaged property) I find escape stories really stressful.
MathematicianGlum880 t1_jeautkf wrote
Reply to comment by MickyW98 in Unity college by MickyW98
I truly don’t remember the name. Sorry! He did his major there and graduated in 2020.
Edit…yes that’s the name.
ScenePlayful1872 t1_jeauo05 wrote
Reply to comment by indyaj in Drama in the woods? by burneruser_67
Unexpected Jake Brakes is a traumatic condition
Character_Screen_265 t1_jeauk44 wrote
Reply to comment by Character_Screen_265 in Drama in the woods? by burneruser_67
We also had a couple major drug busts in nearby areas lately so possibly related. 🤷🏼♀️
[deleted] t1_jeauj05 wrote
Reply to Drama in the woods? by burneruser_67
[deleted]
Kindness_3024 t1_jeaug7o wrote
Reply to My painting of Mattawamkeag river, oils by cerrvine
Remarkable work, a real pleasure to the eyes.
cerebralailment t1_jeauewm wrote
Reply to comment by Tacticalaxel in Grateful to live in a "loose" state by 200Fathoms
Nice what part did you go to? I was in Jacksonville not long ago, near Orange Park - was nice. Went and hungout in Ormond Beach, also very nice.
"Tire Carcass" and Broken Cars didn't see any of those.
Character_Screen_265 t1_jeaudu4 wrote
Reply to Drama in the woods? by burneruser_67
Once in a while, we look at local crime logs and find the most ridiculous incidents. My favorite is compressed below: “PCSO had been involved with a pursuit with a motorcycle, and the operator had fled into the woods. A K9 track was conducted, and K9 Odin located a helmet and riding gloves belonging to the operator. The track continued for several miles… During the track, K9 Odin located the suspects pants, riding jacket, riding pants, a sweatshirt and a rolled-up dollar bill with a lighter (at different points throughout the track). K9 Odin brought the team to the area of the Cardville Rd. where the track was lost. Information was obtained by a citizen that a man in his underwear had been seen coming out of the woods and getting into a vehicle in the area about 30-40 minutes before.”
MickyW98 OP t1_jeaud3c wrote
Reply to comment by MathematicianGlum880 in Unity college by MickyW98
SNHU? I believe that’s where I’m going to transfer to!
NoxiousAether t1_jeb3h3a wrote
Reply to My painting of Mattawamkeag river, oils by cerrvine
This looks next to the exact bend near our land in mattawamkeag, is this beyond the dam?