Portland Monthly Magazine February/March 2022

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SPORTS

Foreground L-R: Sarazen, Ward (barely visible in white), Didrikson, Levinson. Was novelist Kenneth Roberts seated among the spectators (near lattice)? His house was adjacent to the 1st hole fairway, and he was a golfing buddy of Elmer Ward.

PHOTOS: EDWARD HALL SARGENT; RESEARCH BY SHARON CUMMINS AND BETHANY PALMER

Swing Time Visiting golf stars add magic to Maine’s fairways.

T

BY CO L IN W. SAR GE NT

he striking advantage of Maine is, we aren’t on the way to somewhere else. That’s why legendary golfers love to play in the state known as “the Nation’s Air Conditioner.”

We were leafing through a battered Kennebunk Beach photo album when four snapshots jumped off the page. My grandfather, Edward Hall Sargent, documented the July 28, 1935, visit to Webhannet Golf Club by Gene Sarazen (winner of seven majors, including the U.S. Open, Masters, and PGA) and Mildred “Babe” Didrikson, the 1932 Olympic track star who’d win ten major tournaments in the LPGA, becoming

No. 1 in the world by the time she died at 45. The visiting golfers were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. N. “Jim” Campbell, heirs to the Palm Beach jacket clothing fortune and owners of Goodall mills in Sanford. Disembarking from their hosts’ private plane, the players took on Webhannet’s own luminaries Elmer Ward (1930 New England Amateur champion) and John O. Levinson (New England Amateur winner in ’36, ’37, and ’47). When Didrikson hit her drive on the first hole, a loud bang and a spark from the impact made the gallery of 500 jump. The photographer spotted the trick: she’d set up the phosphorus heads of kitchen matches around her ball.

Asked by a fan what he thought of Didrikson’s technique, Sarazen was overheard to say, “She’s a slugger all right.” The late Larry Ward, Elmer’s son, recalled on webhannetgolfclub.com/web/ pages/history: “John had a less-than-spectacular front 9 but Elmer kept them in the match with a commendable 37. Then, on the back, Levinson’s skills kicked in. One of the highlights was when he drove the 16th green and sank the putt.” Bright orange tickets to the event were $1 plus 10 cents tax. At press time, this autographed souvenir (see inset) is priced at $900 online through Gray Flannel Auctions of Scottsdale, Arizona. Now there’s a memory for your shopping cart. n FEB./MARCH 2022 9


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C I T Y

M A G A Z I N E TM

COVER: PROSTOCK-STUDIO; THIS PAGE FROM LEFT: TOM S. WHITNEY; COLIN S. SARGENT (2); OXANA DENEZHKINA; ADOBE STOCK

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15 From the Editor “Fox Bewitched” By Colin W. Sargent

17 Letters

MAINE LIFE 9 Swing Time

We are the ultimate destination tour for many golf legends. By Colin W. Sargent SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

10 Golfing in Maine 19 Chowder

A tasty blend of the Fabulous, the Eyebrow-Raising, and the Just Plain Wrong.

35 Very Adult Beverages

ARTS & STYLE 21 Maine Refrains Here we are at “Camp Granada.” By Gwen Thompson

59 Spring Guide Arts and entertainment in bloom. Compiled by Diane Hudson

HOMES & DESIGN 50 Maine & the International Style

Marvy Modern/Moderne. By Colin W. Sargent

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M A I N E ’ S

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In 1820, this lady of the lake cast a spell on Bridgton. By Colin W. Sargent

78 Maine Real Estate

FOOD & DRINK 39 Hungry Eye

“Pandemic Victory Gardens” Blast from the past. By Diane Hudson

49 Dining Guide

LAST WORDS 88 From Malawi with Love By Colin S. Sargent

19 FEB./MARCH 2022 13


EXTRAORDINARY PERSPECTIVE

75 Bishop St., Portland, Maine 04103 Phone: (207) 775-0101 www.portlandmagazine.com www.portlandmonthly.com Colin W. Sargent Founding Editor & Publisher editor@portlandmonthly.com ART & PRODUCTION Nancy Sargent Art Director Jesse Stenbak Associate Publisher staff@portlandmonthly.com Meaghan Maurice Bailey Design Director meaghan@portlandmonthly.com Mercedes Villeneuve Design ADVERTISING

Per Lofving Advertising Executive per@portlandmonthly.com Andie Ewing Advertising Executive andie@portlandmonthly.com EDITORIAL Gwen Thompson Associate Editor gwen@portlandmonthly.com Sofia Voltin Contributing Editor sofia@portlandmonthly.com Colin S. Sargent Special Features & Archives Jason Hjort Special Projects Bethany Palmer Intern ACCOUNTING Jennifer Lord Controller jennifer@portlandmonthly.com SUBSCRIPTIONS To subscribe please send your address and a check for $35* (1 yr.), $58* (2 yrs.), or $68* (3 yrs.) to Portland Magazine, 75 Bishop St., Portland, ME 04103 *Add 5.5% if mailed to a Maine address. or subscribe online at www.portlandmagazine.com EVENTS PORTAL portlandmonthly.com/portmag/submit-an-event/

Readers & Advertisers

The opinions given in this magazine are those of Portland Magazine writers. No establishment is ever covered in this magazine because it has advertised, and no payment ever influences our stories and reviews. Portland Magazine, a.k.a. Portland Monthly Magazine, is published by Sargent Publishing, Inc. Note: All cor­re­spondence should be addressed to 75 Bishop St., Portland, ME 04103. Advertising Office: 75 Bishop St., Portland, ME 04103. (207) 775-0101. Repeat Internet rights are understood to be purchased with all stories and artwork. For questions regarding advertising, invoicing, and payments, call Jennifer Lord. Newsstand Cover Date: February/March 2022, published in February 2022, Vol. 37, No. 1, copyright 2022. Portland Magazine is mailed at third-class mail rates in Portland, ME 04103 (ISSN: 1073-1857). Opinions expressed in articles are those of authors and do not represent editorial positions of Portland Magazine. Letters to the editor are welcome and will be treated as unconditionally assigned for publication and copyright purposes and as subject to Portland Magazine’s unrestricted right to edit and comment editorially. Responsible only for that portion of any advertisement which is printed incorrectly. Advertisers are responsible for copyrights of materials they submit. Nothing in this issue may be reprinted in whole or in part without written permission from the publishers. Submissions welcome, but we take no responsibility for unsolicited materials. All photography has been enhanced for your enjoyment. Portland Magazine is proudly printed in the USA by Cummings Printing. Portland Magazine is the winner of 75 American Graphic Design Awards presented by Graphic Design USA for excellence in publication design and won two National Association of Real Estate Editors medals for editorial excellence.

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EDITORIAL Colin W. Sargent, Editor & Publisher

Fox

Bewitched

PHOTO: RHONDA FARNHAM; “FOX-BEWITCHED” WAS COINED BY POET ELIZABETH COATSWORTH, IN FOX FOOTPRINTS.

Y

ou know you’re not the most popular kid at camp when your bunkmates slam you into your black footlocker and lock you inside. With your counselor looking on. (Camp Wyanoke on Lake Winnipesaukee no longer exists.) It was my first experience inside the box. I heard footsteps going away. I took a mental snapshot of my new world, black and cornerless. My cherished copy of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The House of the Seven Gables was inside the trunk with me, its spine poking into mine. It was too dark to read. I passed out. I came to with the box unlocked. I exulted in the icy-sharp air, but this was the last straw. I decided to break out of camp, make a mad dash (2.5 miles) to Wolfeboro, and call my parents (collect) from the phone booth just outside the hardware store with the cool Jitterbug fishing lures. Outside Wyanoke’s stone gate, on the crest of the hill, a red fox trotted across the road not twenty feet from me. He stopped, turned his head, and eyed me for twenty seconds. He stared so intently I was sure he was about to speak: “And just where do you think you’re going?” Decades later, I was on an Amtrak train passing through snow country in March when I met him again. Through the window I saw tracks heading toward a barbed-wire fence near the top of a hill. My eyes followed until I saw the fox slip up to the barrier. He was too dignified to dig his way underneath. Too lordly to leap over it. He walked directly through the fence like a sorcerer. He turned to look at me over his shoulder. “That’s how it’s done,” he said.

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LETTERS editor@portlandmonthly.com GAZINE PORTLAND MA

EALS R E A L E S TAT E S T

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FOOD NEWS

2022 WINTERGUIDE

Maine through New Eyes

10 VO LU M E 3 6 , N O.

HOLLYWOOD HOTBED Thank you for the wonderful mention [“Easy Living,” December 2021] of our article about Jean Arthur [“Ms. Deeds,” Summerguide 2009]. We were surprised and delighted! William David and Debra Barry, Portland BLUEBIRDS ON MY SHOULDER What a read [“Senses & Sensibility,” December 2021]! I am speechless to respond in a meaningful way. Diane Hudson’s writing tells a powerful and sad story. She has more than paid her dues and suffered long enough, while keeping a positive attitude and hoping for better days ahead. Bruce Brown, Portland

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Having to cook everything with a timer to make sure it doesn't burn–but then you can't taste whether it burned or not anyway–is like darkly comic Russian literature with characters doing bureaucratic things because that's what is expected, despite them being essentially meaningless. [Hudson’s] positive attitude is amazing. John Danos, Cove Street Arts, Portland MUSICAL HOMEPAGE Dan [Fogelberg] has been my favorite musician and singer for many years. Thank you, Jean, for sharing your memories of your husband [“Wild Child,” April 2010]. I miss his music—or I should say, the music he would have written. I always have him on Google, first thing after the news and weather. Jenny Fryer, Melbourne, Australia

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If you’re thirsting for more Denzel Washington movies after catching him with Frances McDormand in The Tragedy of MacBeth (streaming now), why not binge locally? Pictured: Whitney Houston and Denzel skate the light fantastic at Deering Oaks in The Preacher’s Wife, 1996. This year, Denzel plays the murderous monarch, but in The Preacher’s Wife he’s an angel.

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: BUENA VISTA PICTURES, ADOBE STOCK, STAFF PHOTO, FILE PHOTO

It’s so sad when you lose shrimp from your menu.

Who are you calling a Baby Maine Shrimp? Sorry, seafood lovers. The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission’s Northern Shrimp Section has extended the moratorium on commercial and recreational fishing for northern shrimp It’s a sign of the times: Hunt + Alpine through 2024. now caters both food and cocktails for up

to 300, delivered via Airstream “anywhere in Maine that has flat land we can park on” for “$750 up to your wildest dreams.”

If you’re streaming Being the Ricardos on Amazon Prime, key onscreen narration is performed by Portland’s own Linda Lavin (a.k.a. Alice in TV land for her long-running hit). Lavin plays a former writer for the I Love Lucy show and a witness to the disintegration of the marriage of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz (played by Nicole Kidman and Javier Bardem). Lavin’s character pointedly says she’s “from the Midwest,” but we know better. She was born October 15, 1937, in Portland, Maine.

Come Fly with Me

How can you tell a reindeer in Maine from a caribou? Reindeer can fly. There’s no other difference—reindeer are simply domesticated caribou. According to Maine Audubon, “The loss of old growth forests across the state, which were necessary to provide lichens for the caribou… contributed to the decline of the species, which was last seen in Maine on the saddle of Mt. Katahdin in 1908.” By the way, Santa, your illustrious team of reindeer is all-female if they have antlers in December, because the males shed theirs in November. She/Her/Hers. FEB./MARCH 2022 19



O U T THE RE

Maine

Refrains The wind through the pines. Lake waters lapping the shore. Campfires crackling, voices raised in harmony—all supply the soundtrack to Maine summers.

O

B Y GWEN THOMPSON

ne gray, blustery spring day an opera-singer friend of mine, her parents, and I converge

ANATOLIY_GLEB

on the Jersey shore the morning after her performance of the Bach B Minor Mass in a nearby town, determined to enjoy a stroll on the boardwalk before the clouds burst. “We’ll be fine, as long as we don’t walk backwards in the rain wearing a yellow slicker,” I say as we set off. “At Wohelo, where I went to camp, that was

FEB./MARCH 2022 21


O UT THERE life, with songs for every occasion and for every activity—from keeping a steady pace paddling to timing how long we had to tread water to pass the swim test. We sang to raise team spirit at morning crew practice, out of sheer exuberance sailing in good wind, and whenever we gathered together at mealtimes or around the campfire. “There are cheers, welcome songs, thankyou songs, and sad goodbye songs.”

When my baby was born I sang him camp songs all the time, because they were the only ones I knew by heart.

astonishment. “How did I not know your dad went to Timanous?” I ask Katharine. “How did I not know my dad could sing? I’ve never heard him sing before!”

“THE SOUNDS OF CAMP” In the world music class I took in college, we learned about African tribes that don’t have any way to say “I can’t sing” in the Western sense, because in their culture this would be tantamount to saying “I can’t talk.” Sleepaway camp is much the same. “Singing and camp are synonymous,” says Abby Golden Shapiro, who spent six summers at Camp Vega in Fayette. “Every woman I’ve met who went to girls’ camp talks about singing camp songs. It’s part of the culture of being a camper.” “I can’t imagine camp without singing,” says Andrea Price Stevens of Wohelo, where a camp chorus performs weekly and we all sang constantly as part of daily 22 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE

The dininghall tug-ofwar surrounding the latter is indicative of the degree to which these songs collec-

tively moved us: whenever one table started to sing an end-of-camp song for the first time that summer, another table inevitably decided it was too soon to get all verklempt and drowned out this attempt at nostalgia with the peppiest song involving the most hand-clapping, foot-stomping, and tablethumping, sung at the top of their lungs. “DOWN THROUGH THE YEARS” “The same songs are sung by many generations,” says Barbara Klein, who went to Camp Vega for six summers. “I sing them with my daughter and granddaughter.” “It’s a nice way to connect with alumnae, because when they return to camp they can sing along, and you can watch little girls recognize songs that their grandmothers or aunts or mothers sang to them,” says Lucy Paiste, who spent thirteen summers at Wohelo as a camper and counselor. “When my baby was born I sang him camp songs all the time, because they were the only ones I knew by heart,” says fellow Woheloite Hilary Hodge. And long before Wohelo’s “Col-

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: JIMCUMMING88; SERHIIBOBYK; YANLEV

the only rule—” “You went to Wohelo?” My friend’s dad halts. “I went to Timanous!” Wohelo’s brother camp. “Then you must know ‘Old Chief Timanous!’” We burst into all three verses of this hymn to the founder of both camps—including the two-part harmony on the refrain—smack in the middle of the boardwalk as my friend and her mom look on in


or Song” become alumna Maggie Rogers’s signature tune on stages around the world, “My mother went to the same camp and sang it to me every night at bedtime when I was a child,” says Jenny Edwards Chavira, who spent five summers there herself. “I find myself humming ‘The W in Winona’ all the time,” says Stuart Henderson. “It’s only been twenty years!” “When I get together with my camp friends forty-seven years after I left Camp Hawthorne, we still sing the same songs,” says Jim Brennan. “Our camp day generally closed with singing ‘Taps,’ so even now when we are together, someone will break into

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‘Taps’ when it’s time to wrap up the evening.” “I think if you attend a camp for years, the songs become part of your DNA,” says Nancy Scheerer, who spent eleven summers at Camp Wawenock on Sebago Lake. “Almost fifty years later, I can still remember the words to the songs I learned my first summer.”

A

nd after twenty-six years at Wohelo, “I am almost always humming a camp song to myself,” says Sarah Wildrick Hamilton. “I find the songs soothing,” says fellow alum Jessica Bancroft. “I sing Council Fire songs to myself at the dentist to remind me of a place I felt calm and content. Thinking of camp is comforting to me, especially during stress.” “TIME WILL NEVER DIM” How did such a potent tradition arise? “The camp was largely staffed by the sons of New

A rustic, residential camp in the woods of western Maine and in the shadow of Tumbledown Mountain

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England Ivy Leaguers,” says Westy Dain of Timanous, which was not atypical in this among Maine sleepaway camps. “When they had to come up with songs, they often repurposed their colleges’ football fight songs. ‘Old Chief Timanous’ was taken, with very few word changes, from ‘Lord Jeffery Amherst.’” When I went to college, I was startled to hear another of my brother camp’s anthems, “Rise, Camp Timanous,” ringing out over the Quad on the chapel chimes—based, unbeknownst to me, on the alma mater formerly known as “Rise, Sons of Bowdoin” (now re-titled “Raise Songs

I sing Council Fire songs to myself at the dentist to remind me of a place I felt calm and content. to Bowdoin” to accommodate coeducation).

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24 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE

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ome songs at Wohelo are well over a hundred years old, while others were written last summer. “We have songs from 1910,” says Louise Gulick Van Winkle, whose grandparents founded the camp. “’My Paddle’s Keen and Bright,’ one of the oldest songs we sing, has spread to many other camps and is now considered a generic camp song.” At Camp Vega, “Every year a songbook would be compiled,” says Erika (Kim Singer) Burke. “It must have started in the 1930s or 1940s, because there were older a cappella songs and harmonies that stood the test of time, and each generation added songs, like folk songs in the late 1960s. The mixture of folk, spirituals, contemporary, and old-


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time provides a musical education of cultures and eras that brings the ages together and becomes part of the tradition.” “SEND THE ECHOES FAR AND NEAR” A tradition that flourishes at Maine summer camps to this day. “Counselors are constantly writing songs for camp events,” says Jim Morse of Winona Camps in Bridgton, and at Camp Wawenock “most campers collaborate on songs” too, says Nancy Scheerer. “The fact that songs have been written for many decades by campers speaks to the camp’s deeprooted traditions.” At Wohelo, says Deb Gamber, “songs are written once a week for use at the weekly Council Fire skit, known as Count, as it recounts the week’s events. Some survived, but most were one-hit wonders,” a microcosm of the vicissitudes of pop music. “You need good camp imagery and a

catchy tune with a relatively small range so that most people can sing it," says Lucy Paiste. “I particularly like songs with harmony,” says Camp Vega alum Carla Schine Dener, while Vega counselor Kate Phillips favors songs “that include activities that haven’t changed or traditions that

generations of campers have passed down from mother to daughter. I am reminded of all the memories I have, the friends I’ve made, and all the glorious places around camp that I’ve sung those songs. When an activity requires you to make up a song about camp, you get to put down your thoughts on what you love about it so much.” Case in point: “‘The Sounds of Camp Are Happy Ones’ is an upbeat tune that sings through the specifics of our day at camp based on the noises of different activities, from sailing to metalworking to weaving,” says Anne Lathrop Snow. “As we approached mid-summer, hoping for Beach

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STAFF PHOTOS

OU T THERE


Day, we’d sing this song more often and more loudly at the line about going to the beach, so both the lyrics and how we sang it wove together a joyful picture of a summer day at Wohelo, sung to the tune of ‘Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.’” Much of my knowledge of the Great American Songbook was gleaned secondhand from all the Broadway standards we sang re-written with camp lyrics. As Maria Muth Connor puts it: “You know Wawenock is in your blood when you hear songs and all you can think of is the Wawenock words.” After attending Camp Vega, “Every time I watch The Sound of Music I sing ‘State of Maine’ to the tune of ‘Edelweiss,’” says Ferne Abrams. “DEEP IN THE WOODS OF MAINE” Yet these were not summer theater camps or performing arts camps, as my school friends who didn’t go to camp assumed from the number of times I exclaimed, “We sing this at camp!” on my first chance encounter with the original lyrics to one of my favorite camp songs.

Maine Robotics Summer Camps

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Camp Nashoba North Boys & Girls 7-17 · Raymond, Maine

Camp Nashoba North

Experience all Nashoba North and Crescent Lake have to offer. Traditional Sleepaway and Day Programs. Boys & Girls 7-17 · Raymond, Maine

Sailing · Windsurfing · Waterskiing · Wakeboarding Experience all Nashoba North and Crescent have to offer. Soccer · Basketball · Baseball · TennisLake · Pottery Traditional Sleepaway and Day Programs. Woodworking · Drama · Dance · Guitar · Drums Sailing · Windsurfing · Waterskiing · Wakeboarding Photography · Animal Care · Rock Climbing Soccer · Basketball · Baseball · Tennis · Pottery Hiking · Archery · Kayaking · Golf Woodworking · Drama · Dance · Guitar · Drums Horseback Riding · Community Service Photography · Animal Care · Rock Climbing Hiking · Golf and· Archery more! ··Kayaking 1:3 Ratio Horseback Riding · Community Service and more! · 1:3 Ratio

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OUT T H E R E

Total Recall

During our April 2021 interview with actor Matt Salinger (The Ice Road, 2021), he told us about his mom’s days as a camper in Maine. We’d already discussed his dad’s—the late J. D. Salinger’s—childhood adventures at Camp Wigwam. I just had a fun conversation with her about Wyonegonic! When I asked her about it, she immediately broke into what I gathered was the Wyonegonic song. My 87-year-old mother! Her voice cracked a few times, but she remembered it. She couldn't remember if she went two or three summers. “I wish it had been more.” She was evacuated from London when she was a little girl during World War II. She'd bounced around to different cities, countries—at one time it was a convent school. What a relief Camp Wyonegonic must have been. She found it to be a wonderful, welcoming, empowering, kind place. Once, when I told her I was dating somebody who went there, she loved it.

Then what kind of camp is it? I got a lot of blank looks trying to explain that it wasn’t any kind of specialized theme camp, but just a cluster of cabins in the woods alongside a lake, where we did the obvious things to do in that setting— nature crafts and water sports—and sang while doing them. But clearly, from the even blanker looks I got—Why would you do that?—group singing was not an integral part of most teenagers’ daily lives. Yet it was so thoroughly woven into the fabric of camp life as something everybody could and did do, my only answer was, Why wouldn’t you? “The first thing you notice as a counselor arriving for pre-camp training at Wohelo is just how quiet everything is,” says Bailey McWilliams. “Camp doesn’t seem alive until there’s laughter and song coming from the dining halls. It elicits joy and brings people together.” Group singing also “allows for moments of shared memory and reflection, both silly and serious,” says Cassie Richardson of Hidden Valley Camp in Freedom. On a physiological level, “Music makes people feel happy by triggering the release of dopamine in the

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O U T T H ER E

“Silver and Purple and Twilight”

If you’re a fan of Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter Maggie Rogers, you’ve heard the haunting melody of the “Color Song” she sings from the edge of the stage to close out her concerts. And if you caught "Welcome to My Camp" in our Feb./March 2021 issue, you know she picked up the tune at summer camp in Maine, where the “poetic, descriptive lyrics paint a picture of how beautiful the light is as the day is ending on Sebago Lake,” says fellow Woheloite Mary Griffin. “I once attended an organ recital in Old Orchard Beach where the organist introduced a ‘mood poem’ from the 1920s and I instantly recognized the melody as the ‘Color Song’ at camp. It made me smile, because Wohelo girls and women have long been writing their own lyrics to contemporary songs.”

brain,” says Wohelo alum Nina Pyle Furlanetto. “Singing together creates a bonding experience while feeling the benefits of the increase in dopamine.” “The songs are a special language that we share,” says Sarah Wildrick Hamilton. Without this common ground of music, “I bet the void would be filled by pop songs, which would be polarizing, because there would be some girls that knew songs that others didn’t, so it would be less equalizing,” says Lucy Paiste. “I don’t think I’d feel as connected to the camp and the people without camp songs,” says Elle Yarborough of Slovenski Camps in Raymond, and Jessica Bancroft finds that “Camp friends are many of my closest friends. At the reunion, singing songs by the fire, I felt connected to all of the women there. We all knew all of the words, and sharing that thirty-five years later felt like I was a part of something bigger. I don’t feel this way about high school or college.” “There’s a special kind of connection to know that every girl sitting in the pitch black in the otherwise silent woods is imagining the same thing together, singing a song that connects them across space and time,” says campmate Heather Ainsworth. 30 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE


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O U T T H ER E “Singing is how we transmit culture and values to new campers and maintain them across generations.”

Find your jam at 317 Main Summer Camp Music camp options for all ages Registration now open! July-August 2022

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“HEARTS FULL OF CHEER” lthough Maine summer camps have a long history as incubators for superstars in the arts, from Rodgers and Hart to Stephen Sondheim, Lauren Bacall, Ben Stiller, and Claire Danes (see “Welcome to

A

Music & Lyrics

If you love the song “My Funny Valentine,” it’ll make you smile with your heart to know it was written by two Camp Wigwam alumni, Rodgers and Hart. A generation later, at Camp Androscoggin, Stephen Sondheim was inspired to hear “A Little Night Music” or, depending on how the kids in the next cabin behaved, “Send in the Clowns.”

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Join us for a Safe and Rewarding Summer of Learning My Camp,” Feb./March 2021), “Singing camp songs is something every single camper and counselor can participate in,” says Ted Bucknam of Winona. “It brings instant joy and belonging” even to campers who never sang outside of camp, because “I would have scared people,” says Jim Morse. “That’s why camp is incredible.” “It’s pretty interesting that at an allboys camp, never once did I hear anyone make fun of the singing, or not want to be part of it,” says Bucknam. “But away from camp, it’s likely the majority of those same boys (and men) didn’t sing one song. Camp brings out a special ability to be yourself without anyone judging who you are and permits everyone to just have fun in the moment. So the songs are symbolic of much of what everyone loves about camp: a place to be yourself without fear of being judged. Everyone is accepted, and we all celebrate that together every day through the songs we sing.” n

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Hiding in Maine. With Us. “Death to the Dracu grandson!” In terror, Iordana Ceausescu of Romania disappeared in secret to Old Orchard Beach with her son while the world searched for them. She lived a buried life among us for five years. Drawn from 800

hours of unique interviews with Iordana. Colin W. Sargent’s Red Hands— “an astounding account of the Romanian revolution in the voice of Ceausescu’s daughter-in-law.” –Martin Goodman in the Morning Star “Brilliant. If the novel is Macbeth then it is Romeo and Juliet too, for the pounding heart of the book is a great love story that never fails to move. A tale from last century and a warning for this one, Red Hands is a novel of rare power that teaches us much about Romania and even more about ourselves.” –D. D. Johnston

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aine craft brews, we get a kick out of you. As 2022 unfolds, few are better equipped to insinuate a different kind of kick into local brews than Matt Hawes, CEO of Novel Beverage Co. of Scarborough. Matt matters in this new industry. He’s psychoactive. The cat was let out of the bag when Novel Beverage partnered

with Shipyard Brewing Company to create a nonalcoholic, THC-infused version of Pumpkinhead Ale. Working with Shipyard was “awesome,” Hawes says. “They’re super cool. We’re going to try a 10 mg option next. What we had before was 5 mg.” Did you work with founder Fred Forsley on the Shipyard project? “Yes, but in situations like this we work with ILS—Innovative Liquid Solutions. They’re the intermediary between us and places like Shipyard and Sea Dog.” FEB./MARCH 2022 35


Retail Details

Has the state of hyper-effervescence just been perfected? Using nanoemulsion, Wynk’s “exclusive Maine distributor, AfterGlow Edible Co.,” with offices in Sanford, offers “hard seltzer replacements in Black Cherry Fizz, Juicy Mango, and Lime Twist,” says Casey Coughlin of Wynk. According to preparedfoods.com, “each 8.4-oz. can of Wynk has zero calories and offers a light, relaxing buzz. Wynk's microdose of 2.5 mg THC and 2.5 mg CBD has an onset time of about 10–15 minutes. Product will be available for both medical patients and consumers 21 years of age and older.”

IN THE BOOKS

According to the State of Maine’s Office of Marijuana Policy in Augusta, the first full calendar year of retail sales is complete. December finished strong with $9,477,249 in sales, higher than November’s $8.36M and roughly as high as July. Total sales for 2021 were $81,801,952.

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CA N N A B IZ achieve a similar effect.” A win-win for producers and consumers. Although the National Library of Medicine study “Nanoemulsion: An Advanced Mode of Drug Delivery System” asserts that “The most important application of nanoemulsion is for masking the disagreeable taste of oily liquids,” not all hemp halk it up to “nanoaficionados find fault with emulsion,” defined Maine sales 2021: its flavor. Portland’s Bison Health Eurosell Brothers Brewing and pa’s Medical Cannabis NetMentation Cannabis have work as a “simple process” collaborated on an India by which a high-shear mixer pale ale “that celebrates the spinning “at speeds as fast as smells of our two favor10,000 rpm” and a high-presite plants…with a blend of sure homogenizer “at presterpenes (highly aromatic compounds in sures as high as 30,000 psi…produce droplets both hops and cannabis)” yet emphaticalas small as 1/10,000 of a millimeter—or less ly “DOES NOT CONTAIN CANNABIS, than 1/1,000 the size of a human hair.” THC, or CBD,” according to Bissell BrothWhy go to all that trouble? ers’ website. “Because the absorption rate and bioWhat’s next? availability of nanoemulsions are so much “I do believe we have another skew in higher than with conventional edibles, a the mix,” Hawes says. Stay tuned for a possignificantly smaller dose of cannabinoids sible St. Patrick’s Day reveal. n is required in nanoemulsified edibles to Hawes is also behind the new kick in Sea Dog Brewing Company’s best-selling Wild Blueberry Wheat Ale, first introduced to Maine guzzlers in 1995 and transformed into non-alcoholic Blue Paw THC Elixir to wildly enthusiastic yelps in March 2021.

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H U N GRY E YE

[It] took us all by surprise.

ABOVE FOR ILLUSTRATION PURPOSES ONLY ADOBE STOCK/SHAIITH; RIGHT COURTESY SUE STURTEVANT

—Sue Sturtevant

Pandemic

Victory Gardens

S

New twist for a new war. B Y DIAN E HUDSON

ue Sturtevant, former director of the Hill-Stead Museum in Farmington, CT, with its 152 acres of gardens and grounds, wasn’t looking for gardening advice so much as someone who could help build her a quarantine garden on a smaller scale at her home in Portland. “I wanted a U-shaped, waist-high garden, and I thought Fresh Food Gardens would FEB./MARCH 2022 39


—Sue Sturtevant

be the perfect fit.” Owner Roberto Rodriguez, a Portland City Councilor-At-Large, is also Co-Interim Director of Cultivating Community, a local non-profit that manages community gardens throughout the city, increasing plots in affordable housing locations and outreach to low-income gardeners. Fresh Food Gardens filled Sturtevant’s beds with rich soil and compost—a mixture of seaweed and shells—and then set up a series of maintenance visits.

“T

hings grew like crazy,” Sturtevant says. “You cannot imagine the joy of bringing in fresh flowers once a week, or the satisfaction of looking out your kitchen window and seeing that spot of green and the colors of the flowers. It has calmed me in a way that I didn’t even know I needed.” 40 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: ADOBE STOCK PHOTO; BRENDA LEE (2); KAREN BOULTBEE; SUE STURTEVANT

It’s a conversation starter with the dog walkers going by. My 10-year-old neighbor, Keely Beyland, helps me water and weed…


H U N GRY E YE

Having this little outside oasis where we were growing things helped us escape the scary world… I was in paradise, with chickens running all around me. —Brenda Lee

FEB./MARCH 2022 41


ANTIDOTE TO ISOLATION he pandemic “took us all by surprise. We’ve become more creative in how we approach this new way of life. I started the garden as a project to keep me out of the supermarkets, and to have my own fresh organic produce.” “It’s a conversation starter with the dog walkers going by. My ten-year-old neighbor, Keely Beyland, helps me water and weed, and she and her family enjoy fresh greens all season.”

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TWEAKING TRADITION row-it-yourself food has taken hold in a big way during the pandemic, and it doesn’t show any signs of going away. As the U.S. Department of Agriculture summed it up last year, COVID “exposed a food system that was rigid, consolidated, and

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BRENDA LEE; KAREN BOULTBEE

A Victory Garden grows people too.


H U N GRY E YE fragile,” and that word has spread, like a good fertilizer, to a whole new crop of gardeners doing their part to uproot food insecurity.

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The City leases the Front Room restaurant its own municipal Victory Garden.

odriguez, a physical therapist for seventeen years, started Fresh Food Gardens to transition out of that field, and when COVID hit, left health care to concentrate solely on his new business. “The timing could not have been better. I went from a dozen gardens to twenty-four!” He envisions cultivating more work with clients who seek ongoing help with maintaining their gardens, not just the start up and shut down, growing his business slowly so that he can fully tend to his customers. “I don’t want to be a garden empire, but rather to stay focused on our mission, being purpose-

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FEB./MARCH 2022 43


ful about what we do.” THE FIRST TIME AROUND he notion of growing your own food when times get tough has no start date, but national efforts to defend our supply chains against the threats of wartime can be traced back to 1917, when the U.S. government launched an all-out campaign enlisting civilians to grow “war gardens” to free up food for soldiers fight-

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When all else fails and life is looking grim, plant a garden.

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M a i n e

—Karen Boultbee

ing overseas in World War I. As Rose Hayden-Smith describes it in Sowing the Seeds of Victory: American Gardening Programs of World War I (2014), the effort to get people involved was “striking in its use of military imagery,” with posters depicting women and children as “soldiers of the soil.” With the onset of World War II in the 1940s, the same mindset prevailed. “Grow your own, can your own” became a popular mantra, and the nation took to heart quotes such as this one from Claude Wickard, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1940-45) and head of the War Food Administration: “A Victory Garden is like a share in an airplane factory. It helps win the War and it pays dividends too.” Americans used every scrap of soil to cultivate an estimated twenty million “Victory Gardens,” growing nearly forty percent of the nation’s fruits and vegetables. Now in 2022, we are at war with COVID. Food shortages are real, as supply chains are interrupted. Regional distribution centers are reeling, climate change affects delivery, and more workers and delivery personnel in grocery stores are desperately needed, leading to recurring bare shelves that were once bursting with food supplies we thought would always be here. The seeds are again planted for us to recognize the role food plays in soldiering on, and to do something about it ourselves on the home front.


HU NGRY E YE GROW IT IN GOOD HEALTH For Brenda Lee and her husband Kevin Schooley, both RNs at Maine Medical Center at the peak of the pandemic, their victory garden at their newly purchased home in Gray turned out to be a major stress buster. “Back in the beginning of the pandemic, I would pull up at the hospital and just be shaking with so much anxiety—and then on top of that, having to stay home the rest of the time, not going anywhere for any relief,” Brenda says. “Having this little outside oasis where we were growing things helped us escape the scary world.” They added chickens, building them a mighty fine coop. “Before work, I let the chickens out to free-range all day, and come home and make sure they’re putting themselves to bed. They’re a hoot and a half— they all have names and personalities. Our three golden girls are of course named Blanche, Rose, and Dorothy. Many days I just lay on the lawn and felt like I was in paradise, with chickens running all around me, cut off from the craziness of the world.” Not that gardening is all a bed of ros-

TV Guide

In the early days of the pandemic, on May 1,

2020, the University of Maine Cooperative Extension released the first episode of their

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es. “My first attempt at growing veggies in a raised bed ended up being an overgrown jungle. That’s part of the fun—figuring out the best way to grow food.” Even as COVID restrictions ease, “I have so many plans this year! Our soil is so rocky we’ve got two raised beds now, plus a trellis, garlic, pole beans, nasturtiums...I haven’t canned anything yet, but that’s the next step.” Meanwhile, “When you begin and end the day outside, it’s so restorative.” DIGGING IN ccording to Joshua D’Errico of Johnny’s Selected Seeds in Winslow, “gardening has been on the rise in the U.S. for several years, which certainly accelerated with the onset of the pandemic in 2020. We continued to see growth

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H U N G RY EY E in 2021, which is ongoing in 2022.” “COVID definitely brought home gardening to new heights,” says Mike Skillin, co-owner of Skillins Greenhouse in Falmouth. “We’re seeing interest here we’ve never seen before. From a business perspective it’s not without its challenges, like staffing and supply-chain issues. But I’m not complaining. It’s wonderful to see people embrace filling their time with an interest that gratifies them.” Months ago, “I ran into an Axiom Marketing survey showing more than eighty percent of new gardeners in 2020 planned to continue in 2021. On weekends this place is filled with a record number of young gardeners.” A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD After so many COVID-related shutdowns, it’s a refreshing contrast to see Portland’s green space expand. Karen Boultbee has for years planted a wee patch of flowers outside the The Front Room in the East End, until “COVID provided the opportu-

nity for me to do more.” With the city’s allowing more outdoor space to be used by the restaurant, her tiny garden grew tenfold, as she filled the greatly extended patio with flowers galore. “It is one of the joys of my life. I get up, put on my gardening clothes, and get to work, and when finished, walk the Prom for two or three miles. It’s my big outing and makes me feel less anxious about not doing things like going to the movies, which I enjoyed so much pre-COVID.”

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hough not planting carrots or zucchini (she does grow tomatoes and herbs in boxes at the side of the building), Boultbee is raising the community’s morale during troubling times. “When I work in that garden, people stop and tell me how lovely it is, or they compare garden notes, lamenting that their zinnias are not doing so well. It’s such a gift for my mental health,” she says in her delightful downunder accent. “When all else fails and life is looking grim, plant a garden.” n

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DINING GUIDE Andy’s Old Port Pub…Best traditional lobster roll on Portland’s waterfront, extraordinary pizza (even create your own!) and pub fare. Local fresh seafood. Live acoustic music. Never a cover. Local brews and waterfront style cocktails, 94 Commercial Street, Portland, 874-2639 Anthony’s Italian Kitchen 30 years of Old World recipes. Best meatballs in town. Mile-high lasagnas, fresh-filled cannoli pastries, 54 sandwiches, pizza. A timeless great family spot. Beer and wine. Free parking. 151 Middle St., Portland, AnthonysItalianKitchen.com, 774-8668. Bandaloop has moved into a restored 1700s barn on Route 1 in Arundel. Since 2004 we have offered locally sourced, globally inspired, organic cuisine. Our new home has plenty of space, parking, outdoor seating, takeout, and an event space in the loft. We continue to offer something for every palate—from vegans to carnivores and everything in between. bandalooprestaurant.com BlueFin North Atlantic Seafood Chef Gil Plaster creates the quintessential Old Port dining experience: classic, contemporary dishes with fresh, locally caught seafood & seasonal ingredients. Breakfast, lunch, dinner, or your favorite cocktail in comfortable elegance or out on the

patio w/fire pit. 468 Fore St. 775-9090, bluefinportland.com Boone’s A Portland landmark since 1898. Original home of Alexander Boone’s world-famous Baked Stuffed Lobster. Two waterfront decks, two full bars, two cozy dining rooms, fireside tables. Perfect setting to enjoy the finest seafood from Maine and the world. Steaks, chowder, lobster rolls, grilled dishes, daily features. Visit Boone’s for a romantic date, business luncheon, family gathering or large banquet. BoonesFishHouse.com DiMillo’s On the Water Now’s the time to enjoy everything DiMillo’s has to offer: fabulous dishes prepared by Head Chef, Melissa Bouchard, voted one of Maine’s Chefs of the Year, plus Certified Angus Beef, Italian and the best lobster around. Our outside dining is unparalleled. Open Monday thru Saturday at noon, Commercial St., Old Port 772-2216. Always FREE PARKING while aboard. El Corazon Mexican food from the heart. Authentic family recipes passed down through generations & “oversized tequila selection.” Try our “Marisco”—a Mexican seafood cocktail of shrimp, bay scallops, clams, octopus & Maine lobster. Lun. & din., Mon.– Thurs. 11–10. Fri.-Sat. till 11. Sun. 9–9. 190

State St. 536-1354, elcorazonportland.com. Flatbread Company Portland Tucked between two wharves with picturesque waterfront views. Family-friendly restaurant w/ signature pizzas, weekly carne & veggie specials. Made w/ local ingredients, baked in wood-fired, clay ovens. Everything’s homemade, organic, and nitrate-free. 24 local drafts & cocktails showcase all-local breweries & distilleries. 72 Commercial St., 772-8777, flatbreadcompany.com.

J’s Oyster Premier seafood destination & locals’ favorite w/indoor & outdoor waterfront seating on a scenic Portland pier. Since 1977, classic favorites, friendly service. Named by Coastal Living one of “America’s Best Seafood Dives 2016.” 722-4828. Po’ Boys & Pickles Small, easygoing joint constructing oversized po’boy sandwiches along with other hearty cajun eats! CAJUN…CREOLE... SANDWICHES…BURGERS… SEAFOOD…WINGS. 1124 Forest Ave, Portland, 518-9735. Profenno’s has been fixture on Main Street in Westbrook since established in 1962. Whether it’s good food you crave, a kid’s menu for the family, or some good entertainment, Profenno’s is the place to be! 934 Maine Street, Westbrook, 856-0033

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Maine & the International Style

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The 1930s and 1940s were the first to see the 2020s.

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B Y COLIN W. SARG EN T

ORGONON, RANGELEY “Located at the summit of a hill overlooking Dodge Pond, the Orgone Energy Observatory is an International Style building that was designed by the New York architect James B. Bell and constructed in 1948 for Dr. Wilhelm Reich (1897-1957), a controversial psychiatrist who developed

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HOU S E AN D GAR DE N

1936

Fortune Rock, Seal Harbor George Howe Forms of American Architecture (1976), Philip Isaacson wrote that ‘The modern home…made its tentative debut in 1936 from designs prepared by George Howe for Clara Fargo Thomas. The resulting low house of native materials is cantilevered over the waters of Seal Harbor, a choice its architect…shared with [Frank Lloyd] Wright.’”

52 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE

TOM CRANE

F

allingwater, eat your heart out. A daredevil detail: for years this was Norman Mailer’s summer home in Maine. “He urged us to jump off of the deck of the house fifty feet into the ocean upon arrival to the house, so that ‘we’d really feel we were here,’” his daughter Kate revealed in a 2008 memorial tribute at Carnegie Hall. “He once even walked the edge of the roof as it ‘scared im’ and it was something he ‘hadda do. We have to face our fears by en-


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HOU S E AND G AR DE N

The international style is intellectual, not sensual. It’s not of the gut. Severe. If you’re not good at it you end up with lots of bad concrete buildings. —Scott Simons

2017

gaging with our fears,’ he would say.” To tag along with Mailer in Maine, read Harlot’s Ghost. THE WALTER GROPIUS HOUSE, BROOKLIN If your house was designed by Bauhaus founder Walter Gropius, then it by definition meets the criteria. Take a tour of his 1947 creation in Brooklin: youtube.com/ watch?v=SDF9ahyUIJA

1947

Gropius House, Brooklin Walter Gropius 54 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE

HAROLD TANDY HOUSE, HAMPDEN HIGHLANDS Art critic Isaacson ventures in Maine Forms of Architecture that the 1944 “Harold Tandy House at Hampden Highland” designed by architect Eaton W. Tarbell of Bangor, also makes the cut.

FROM TOP: ROBERT BENSON, PHOTOGRAPHER; SIMONS ARCHITECTS(2); ARCHIEXPO.COM/ TECTA; COURTESY DOWNEAST PROPERTIES; PRIVATE COLLECTION

Patrons Oxford Insurance Company Building, Portland Simons Architects


2017

Jocelyn Road, Scarborough Simons Architects

Hiding in Maine. With Us. “Death to the Dracu grandson!” In terror, Iordana Ceausescu of Romania disappeared in secret to Old Orchard Beach with her son while the world searched for them. She lived a buried life among us for five years. Drawn from 800 hours of unique interviews with Iordana. Colin W. Sargent’s Red Hands—“an astounding account of the Romanian revolution in the voice of Ceausescu’s daughter-in-law.” –Martin Goodman in the Morning Star

barbicanpress.com/book/red-hands/

1920 F51 Armchair Walter Gropius

1944

Harold Tandy House, Hampden

207-789-5188 • WindsorChair.com

Eaton W. Tarbell

FEB./MARCH 2022 55


If one would ask how the monumental can ever be tender, I reply that such words recall us to the beautiful and awesome. —Norman Mailer, Harlot’s Ghost

1948

Orgone Energy Observatory Rangeley, James B. Bell

“THE GLASS HOUSE,” FALMOUTH Want some more International velvet? See our story (Heart of Glass, September 2006) about the landmark Payson House in Falmouth Foreside designed by Gropius protégé Serge Chermayeff in 1952 and extended by his son Peter in 1972. “The whole house cantilevers at an average height of twelve inches above ground in all directions and is entered everywhere over open oak slat steps. These two devices absorb variants in snow level and minimize the risk of snow drifts and ice formation over the steps,” Chermayeff wrote in The Architectural Review in 1954.

“It has its roots in the Gropius days,” says Scott Simons of Simons Architects in Portland. “Early on, I worked in the Breuer office in New York, so I was close to that. He taught with Gropius at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. Breuer designed a house across the street from Fort Williams [at 84 Stonybrook Road] in Cape Elizabeth that we recently renovated—it has a U shape with a courtyard in the center. “The [1979] Portland Public Library that we updated was originally described as ‘late International Style’ in the Congress Street [landmark] docs. It was clad in granite. We enclosed it in glass.”

2013

223 Beach Ave., Kennebunk Attardo Pondelis Architecture

56 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE

TWIST ON A TWIST hat do you call it when you alter something that was already in the International Style? “We call it a modern intervention. The building didn’t work anymore. It was built when many libraries were modeled on the

W

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: FILE PHOTO; MEAGHAN MAURICE BAILEY; BETHANY PALMER (4)

Does the International Style still have currency as part of the vocabulary among contemporary architects?


1949

HO U S E A N D GA RDE N

Potter House, Cape Elizabeth Marcel Breuer

Louis Kahn library at Phillips Exeter Academy. When it came out, it was a breakthrough design. It’s like a cube on the inside. You go into the void, go get your book, and walk toward the light. You come up in the darkness—the center of your brain—then go to the reading tables. Because of this, libraries all over now have darkness in the center and you go out to the light. “The Portland Public Library was built on that same paradigm. You’d enter by a long ramp to the circulation desk—remember that?—and then you’re in the dark core. “We thought that’s not a relevant paradigm anymore. Now you can have the Library of Congress on your phone, so let’s flip it around. [Our 2010 renovation] brought the insides of the library to the street to participate in the Square.”

1952

Payson House, Falmouth Serge Chermayeff

In search of the earliest stabs at modernism in Maine—plus some innovative new twists.

MORE INFLUENCE The Haystack Mountain School of Crafts on Deer Isle is in part an evolution of the International Style. “It was designed by Ed[ward] Larrabee Barnes [in 1960],” Simons says. “Barnes also designed houses in Boothbay and in the Acadia area. They’re the next generation of the Gropius houses. Right now we’re doing a master plan for Haystack.” A THIRD GENERATION Maine architect Carol Wilson’s work, like Simons’s, draws inspiration from the International Style. Visit carolwilsonarchitect.com. n Research by Bethany Palmer FEB./MARCH 2022 57


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EXPERIENCE

Spring Guide 2022 Home & Garden Shows

Bangor Home Show, Cross Insurance Center, 515 Main St. Mar. 26–27. 800-237-6024. Bath Antique Sale, Bath Middle School, 6 Old Brunswick Rd. Furniture, jewelry, toys, dolls, paintings, and folk art, Mar. 13 and Apr. 24. 832-7798.

NH. Exhibitions for homeowners, gardening, and recreational activities, Apr. 23. 805-727-3376. Kennebunk Antiques Show & Sale, The Middle School of the Kennebunks,

vintage clothing, and toys both indoors and outdoors, Aug. 12-13. 350-9444. The Maine + Garden Marketplace, 8 Thompson's Point Rd. Indoor market with over 100 garden sup-

One Night Only!

Boothbay Region Antiques Show & Sale, The Boothbay Common, Route 27. July 9. 832-7798 Burlington Home Show, DoubleTree by Hilton, 870 Williston Rd., Burlington, VT. Regional home improvement show, Mar. 4. 800237-6024 Camden-Rockport Antiques Show & Sale, Camden Hills Regional High School, 25 Keelson Dr., Rockport. Jul.23–24.

COURTESY PHOTO

Connecticut Flower & Garden Show, Connecticut Convention Center, 100 Columbus Blvd., Hartford. Over 300 booths, beautifully landscaped gardens, design & horticulture competition, and over 80 hours of seminars and demonstrations, Feb. 24–27. 860-844-8461. Newport Daffodil Days, Newport, RI. Free festival events across the city while over 1 million donated daffodils bloom, Apr. 1-30. newportdaffydays.com. Home, Garden & Recreation Show, Prospect Mountain High School, 242 Suncook Valley Rd., Alton,

The Maine Home Show, Norway Savings Bank Arena, 985 Turner St., Auburn. Over 100 home-related products and services like landscaping, pool & spa, weatherization & efficiency, new construction & additions, generator systems, banks, credit unions & mortgage lenders, with showonly discounts, special offers, and giveaways, Mar. 19–20. 577-2721. Home Garden Flower Show with Cannabis, Fryeburg Fairgrounds, 1154 Main St. Live music, food, beer and wine, seminars, 150 exhibitors offering services and products for your home, garden and personal use, cannabis products to grow your own and for personal use, and vendors sell edibles and products for medicinal use, May 20–22. 603-7335808. Vermont Flower Show, Champlain Valley Expo, 105 Pearl St., Essex Junction. A garden adventure for all ages. Mar 4–6. 802-4255117.

60 Thompson Rd., Kennebunk. Aug. 13–14.

ply and services merchants, Mar. 25–27. 623-6430.

Wells Outdoor Antiques Show and Sale, 342 Laudholm Farm Rd. Over 75 exhibitors selling furniture, china, and jewelry, Jun. 26. 800-641-6908.

Maine Antiques Festival, 1 Fairgrounds Lane, Union. Over 150 antiques dealers from across the U.S. and Canada display formal and informal furnishings, art, repurposed items, jewelry, rugs,

Maine Home Show, Cross Insurance Center, 515 Main St., Bangor. Local contractors, landscapers, and home improvement specialists strut their stuff, Mar. 26–27. 321-4246.

Western Massachusetts Home & Garden Show, Eastern States Expo, 1305 Memorial Ave., West Springfield. Attractions include the Delta Mobile Showroom, Mar. 24–27.

Let’s all welcome Gladys Knight to Portland’s Merrill Auditorium on March 11. 842-0800.

413-733-8158.

Maine Boat Shows

Maine Boats, Homes, & Harbors Show, Harbor Park, 1 Pleasant St., Rockland. With artists, architects, boatbuilders, craftsmen, designers, furniture-makers, and jewelers, Aug.12–14. 594-8622. The Portland Boat Show, Portland Sports Complex, 512 Warren Ave. Center console and walkaround fishing boats, bowriders, cuddy cabins, cruisers, pontoon boats, wakeboard boats, and wakesurf boats, Mar.3–6. 655-2722.

Theater

Footlights Theatre, 190 US1, Falmouth. A Passage of Time, Apr. 7–23. 747-5434. Good Theater, St. Lawrence Arts Center, 76 Congress St. Harry Townsend’s Last Stand, through Feb. 20; Significant Other, Mar. 2–20; Desperate Measures, Mar. 30–Apr. 24. 835-0895. Gracie Theatre, 1 College Cir., Bangor. Queen Flash, Mar. 26; TAKE3, Apr. 28. 941-7888. Mayo Street Arts, 10 Mayo St. Modern Times Theater's The Perils of Mr. Punch, Feb. 19. 879-4629. Penobscot Theatre Company, Bangor Opera House, 131 Main St. Maytag Virgin, through Feb. 27; Hockey Mom, Mar. 24–Apr. 16. 942-3333. Portland Ovations, Merrill

FEB./MARCH 2022 59


Hiding in Maine. With Us. “Death to the Dracu grandson!” In terror, Iordana Ceausescu of Romania disappeared in secret to Old Orchard Beach with her son while the world searched for them. She lived a buried life among us for five years. Drawn from 800 hours of unique interviews with Iordana. Colin W. Sargent’s Red Hands—“an astounding account of the Romanian revolution in the voice of Ceausescu’s daughter-in-law.” –Martin Goodman in the Morning Star

barbicanpress.com/book/red-hands/

EXPERIENCE Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St. Rosie Revere, Engineer & Friends, Mar. 6; The Origin of Love: The Songs and Stories of Hedwig, Mar. 18; Requiem for an Electric Chair (re-scheduled), Apr. 27. 842-0800. Portland Stage, 25A Forest Ave. Last Ship to Proxima Centauri, Mar. 2–20; I And You, Mar. 30–Apr. 17. 774-0465. The Public Theater, 31 Maple St., Lewiston. Dancing Lessons, Mar. 11–20; Screwball Comedy, Apr. 29–May 8; Be Here Now, June 17–26. 782-3200. Waterville Opera House, 1 Common St. Cyrano De Bergerac, March 5; Tuck Everlasting: The Musical, Apr. 1–10. 873-7000.

Dance

Collins Center for the Arts, 2 Flagstaff Rd., Orono. Anne of Green Gables: The Ballet, Apr. 16. 581-1755. Maine State Ballet, Lopez Theater, 348 U. S. Route 1, Falmouth. Beauty and the Beast, Mar. 25–Apr.10. 781-3587. Portland Ballet, Westbrook PAC, 471 Stroudwater St. Boy Meets Girl, Mar. 11; Firebird, Apr. 29–30. 842-0800.

Portland Ovations, Merrill Auditorium, 20

And now...Falmouth!

Proud to carry on the legacy of The Book Review in Falmouth (Psst...Watch for big growth in March!)

Myrtle St. Step Afrika!, Apr. 7. 842-0800.

Music

Blue, 650A Congress St. Cumberland Crossing

& Bluegrass Tracy McMullen, Feb. 19; Ocean Sol Jazz & Special Guests, Feb. 20; Maine Middle Eastern Ensemble, and Showmen’s Rest, Mar. 3; Darlin’ Corey, Mar. 4; Michael Beling, Mar. 5; Gleg Klein & Clementine;s Army, Mar. 6; Matt Meyer & the Gumption Junction, Cumberland Crossing and Bluegrass Jam Session, Mar. 10; el malo, Mar. 11; Carl Dimow Quartet, Titus Abbott Collective, Mar. 12; Jenny Van West & Special Guests, Mar. 13; Layne’s Wine Gig, and D. Gross, Mar. 17; Choro Louco, Mar. 18; Tracy McMullen, Mar. 19; Sue Sheriff Jazz, Mar. 20; Bess Jacaues & The Strays, Mar. 22; Frank Fotusky and KF3 Vibing on a Thursday!, Mar. 24; Samuel James, Mar. 25; Sherrie Phair Trio, Mar. 26; Jazz Sesh, every Tue; Irish Session, every Wed. 774-4111.

The Chocolate Church Arts Center, 804 Washington St., Bath. Erica Brown and The Bluegrass Connection, Feb. 25; An Evening with Tom Rush, March 26; The Mallett Brothers Band, April 9. 442-8455. Collins Center for the Arts, 2 Flagstaff Rd., Orono. Nobuntu, Feb. 13; Rigoletto, Feb. 19; Masterworks IV: From the Firebird to the Future, Mar. 6; The Robert Cray Band, Mar. 12; The Warming Sea, Mar. 19; Martina McBride, Mar. 26; Miró Quartet with David Shifrin, Mar. 27; Ariadne auf Naxos, Apr.3; Masterworks V: The Grand Finale, Apr. 10. 581-1755.

(207) 781-4808 shermans.com 60 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE

Friends of the Kotzschmar Organ, Merrill Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St. Bach Birthday Bash, Mar. 22 (on-demand Mar. 26–Apr. 25). 553-4363.


Diana Krall April 5 Merrill Auditorium

For Now And Ever A Most Unusual Gift of Love

Mayo Street Arts, 10 Bonnie Raitt Mayo St. Seyir Duo: April 23 Music of the Middle Merrill Audito rium East, Feb. 25; Narración Flamenca Featuring Dance, Song & Guitar, Feb. 26 & 27. 879-4629. Merrill Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St. Gladys Knight, Mar. 11; The World’s Greatest Pink Floyd Show: Brit Floyd World Tour, Mar. 25; Celtic Woman: Postcards from Ireland, Mar. 29; The Beach Boys: 60 Years of the Sounds of Summer, Apr. 1; Diana Krall, Apr. 5; Bonnie Raitt: Just Like That Tour, Apr. 23. 842-0800. One Longfellow Square, 181 State St. Clem Snide, Feb. 23; John McEuen of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Feb. 26; Le Vent Du Nord, Feb. 27; Dervish, Mar. 2; David Wax Museum (trio), Mar. 3; Seamus Egan Project, Mar. 5; Lurrie Bell with the Blues Prophets, Mar. 10; Josephine County, Mar. 11; Mark Erelli and Mary Bragg, Mar. 16; Portland Jazz Orchestra, Mar. 24; Stick Men feat. Tony Levin, Pat Mastelotto, and Marcus Reuter, Apr. 5; John Craigie with special guest The Lowest Pair, Apr. 6–7; Jill Sobule with Emma Ivy, Apr. 10; Portland Jazz Orchestra, Apr. 21. 761-1757. Portland House of Music, 25 Temple St. You Should Smile More, Mar. 3; Marble Eyes, Mar. 4; Yellow Ledvedde: A Tribute to Pearl Jam and Loud Love: A Tribute to Soundgarden, Apr. 18; Randon Rab with special guest Cosmal, Apr. 20. 805-0134.

DIANA KRALL: COURTESY PHOTO; BONNIE RAITT

Portland Ovations, Merrill Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St. Anaïs Mitchell + Bonny Light Horseman, Feb. 17; Sphinx Virtuosi, Mar. 31, From Marnako to Birmingham: Amadou & Mariam and Blind Boys of Alabama, Apr. 29. 842-0800. Portland Symphony Orchestra, Merrill Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St. Eckart Conducts Bartók, Feb. 20 & 22 (on-demand Mar. 2–Apr. 1); Music of Motown, Feb 26–27 (on-demand Mar. 9–Apr. 8); Barber & Brahms, Mar. 14 (on-demand Mar. 16– Apr. 15); Singers and Songwriters with Michael Cavanaugh: The Music of Paul Simon, James Taylor, and Neil Diamond, Mar. 19–20; The Composer Is Dead (re-scheduled), Mar. 27; Dan Brown’s Wild Symphony, Apr. 3; St. Matthew Passion, Apr. 10 & 12 (on-demand Apr. 20–May 20). 842-0800. State Theatre, 609 Congress St. Punch Brothers, Mar. 5; Allison Russell, Mar. 9; Dark Star Orchestra, Mar.11–12; Ministry, Mar. 13; Dropkick Murphys, Mar. 15; The Origin of Love, Mar. 18; Festival Of Praise, Mar. 20; Sammy Rae, Mar.

the poem reads:

“There is no moment of my life when you are not a part of me; you hold my heart; you guard my soul; you guide my dreams so tenderly. And if my will might be done, and all I long for could come true, with perfect joy I would choose to share eternity with you.” Dear Reader, The drawing you see above is called For Now and Ever. It is completely composed of dots of ink. After writing the poem, I worked with a quill pen and placed thousands of these dots, one at a time, to create this gift in honor of the love of two of my dearest friends. Now, I have decided to offer For Now and Ever to those who have known and value its sentiment as well. Each litho is numbered and signed by hand and precisely captures the detail of the drawing. As an anniversary, wedding, or Valentine’s gift for your husband or wife, or for a special couple within your circle of friends, I believe you will find it most appropriate. Measuring 14" by 16", it is available either fully-framed in a subtle copper tone with handcut double mats of pewter and rust at $145*, or in the mats alone at $105*. Please add $18.95 for insured shipping. Returns/exchanges within 30 days. My best wishes are with you.

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25; Car Seat Headrest, Mar. 27; Amos Lee, Apr. 8; Lettuce, Apr. 9; Mt. Joy, Apr. 10; Sierra Ferrell, Apr. 14. 956-6000. Stone Mountain Arts Center, 695 Dugway Rd., Brownfield. Erica Brown and the Bluegrass Connection, Feb. 26; Teddy Thompson and Jenni Muldaur, Mar. 4; Ye Vagabonds, March 11; Kris Delmhorst, Mar. 12; Robert Cray Band, Mar. 15; St. Paddy’s Celebration, Mar. 17; Celia Woodsmith and Jason Anick Trio, Mar. 18; Los Lobos, Mar. 23; Matt Nagoya, Mar. 25; Kat Edmonton, Mar. 26; The Wailin’ Jennys, Mar. 30; Jimmie Vaughan, Mar. 31; David, Luke, and Will Mallett, Apr. 8; Gibson Brothers, Apr. 9; George Winston, Apr. 14; Bacon Brothers, Apr. 15. 935-7292. The Strand Theatre, 345 Main St., Rockland. Oshima Brothers, Feb. 18; German Lopez and Antonio Toledo, Mar. 17. 594-0070. Waterville Opera House, 1 Common St. Bruce Cockburn, Mar. 1. 873-7000.

Comedy

Cross Insurance Arena, 1 Civic Center Sq. Jeff Dunham: Seriously?!, Mar. 17; John Mulaney: From Scratch, Mar. 18. 791-2200. Merrill Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St. Tim Dillon: A Real Hero, Feb. 23; Whitney Cummings: Touch Me Tour, Mar. 18; Bert Kreischer: The Berty Boy

62 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE


Relapse Tour, Apr. 2. 842-0800. State Theatre, 609 Congress St. Al Franken, Mar. 6; Tom Segura, Mar. 16–17; Gus Johnson, Mar. 19; Trey Kennedy, Mar. 24; Patton Oswalt, Mar. 26; CrankGameplays, Apr. 15. 956-6000. Stone Mountain Arts Center, 695 Dugway Rd., Brownfield. Bob Marley, Feb. 17. 935-7292.

Art

Bates College Museum of Art, 75 Russell St., Lewiston. Lesley Dill Wilderness: Light Sizzles Around Me, through Mar. 26. 786-6158. Bowdoin College Museum of Art, 245 Maine St., Brunswick. New Views of the Middle Ages: Highlights from the Wyvern Collection, Assyria to America, through Feb. 27; Re|Framing the Collection: New Considerations in European and American Art, 1475-1875, through Dec. 21, 2023. 725-3275.

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EXPERIENCE

494 494 Stevens Stevens Avenue, Avenue, Portland, Portland, Maine Maine •• thehoneyexchange.com thehoneyexchange.com •• 207.773.9333 207.773.9333 ••

Brick Store Museum, 117 Main St., Kennebunk. Jane Morgan: In My Style, through Feb. 28. 985-4802. Center for Maine Contemporary Art, 21 Winter St., Rockland. Chris Doyle: The Fabricators, through May 8; Nicola Lopez: Visions, Phantoms, and Apparitions, through May 8; Young Sun Han: Passages from a Memoir and Tourist in the Dark, through May 8. 701-5005. Colby College Museum of Art, 5600 Mayflower Hill Dr., Waterville. Jacob Lawrence: The Life of Toussaint L’Ouverture, through Feb. 20; The Poetics of Atmosphere: Lorna Simpson’s Cloudscape and Other Works from the Collection, through Apr. 17; Act of Sight: The Tsiaras Family Photography Collection, through Aug. 14; Sarah Cain: hand in hand, Mar. 31–Dec. 11. 859-5600. Cove Street Arts, 71 Cove St. Birds, through Feb. 19; Wintry Mix, through Mar. 12; Michael Torlen: Dance Me to the End, through Apr. 9. 808-8911. Farnsworth Art Museum, 16 Museum St., Rockland. Women of Vision, through Mar. 6; Robert Indiana: The Hartley Elegies, through Mar. 27; Betsy Wyeth: Partner and Muse, through Apr. 3; Robert Indiana: The Hartley Elegies, through Mar. 27; Betsy’s Gift: The Works of N.C., Andrew, and Jamie Wyeth, through May 8. 596-6457. Greenhut Galleries, 146 Middle St. Showcase: Greenhut Artists, through Apr. 2; 11th Biennial Portland Show, Apr. 7–May 28. 772-2693. Maine Historical Society, 489 Congress St., Northern Threads: Two Centuries of Dress at Maine Historical Society, Part 1: Clothing circa 1780–1889, Mar. 16–July 30; Part II: Clothing circa 1890–1980, Aug. 12–Dec. 31. 774-1822.

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Maine Maritime Museum, 243 Washington St., Bath. Sustaining Maine’s Waters: Understanding the Changing Gulf of Maine; A Sailor’s Treasure: Sea Chests & Curiosities; Shipwrecks & Salvage, through Dec. 31. 443-1316.

FEB./MARCH 2022 63


EXPERIENCE Maine Narrow Gauge Railroad Co. & Museum, 49 Thames St. The Black Guards of Maine. 842-0800. The Maine Photography Show, Boothbay Region Art Foundation, 1 Townsend Ave., Boothbay Harbor. Annual premier juried gallery show of photography in Maine for 15 years, Apr.9– May 6. 633-2703. Maine Sculpture Trail, Schoodic International Sculpture Symposium. An outdoor exhibit of 34 sculptures spanning over 273 miles along the coastal region of Downeast Maine. schoodicsculpture.org. Messler Gallery, 25 Mill St., Rockport. Maine Wood 2022: 8th biennial, juried show of outstanding Maine woodworkers in all genres, through Apr. 6. 594-5611. Moss Galleries, 100 Fore St. & 251 US-1, Falmouth.

Charlie Hewitt: Bush of Ghosts, through Feb. 28. 781-2620.

land Museum of Art, 716 Stevens Ave. Sistered, Feb. 18–Jun. 12. 221-4499.

Portland Museum of Art, 7 Congress Sq. North Atlantic Triennial Down North, Feb. 18–Jun. 5; Interaction of Color: Prints from the PMA Collection, Feb. 19–May 22.; Flying Woman: The Paintings of Katherine Bradford, Jun. 25–Sep. 11. 775-6148.

Zero Station, 222 Anderson St. Exhibit by Members of the Addison Woolley Gallery, Mar. 1-31. 347-7000

Richard Boyd Art Gallery, 15 Epps St., Peaks Island. A Group Exhibit of Visual Art, through Feb 27; A Walk in the Woods, Mar. 4–27; Works on Paper, Apr. 1–29. 712-1097. River Arts, 241 US-1, Damariscotta. Black & White, through Mar. 26; New Works, Mar. 26-May 7. 563-1507. Ticonic Gallery and Studio, 10 Water St., Suite 104, Waterville. Youth Art Month 2022, Mar. 1–31. 872-2787. University of New Eng-

64 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE

Don’t Miss

Carnaval ME Winter Festival, Eastern Prom. Bites & Brews igloo, ice sculpture demos, bonfire, kids’ activities, live music, Feb. 17–26. 613-8303.

Family Scavenger Hunt,

Carter’s XC Ski, Bethel. Find Maine animal tracks signs to win prizes. Free for kids, Feb. 19–27. 824-3880.

Nonstop Nordic. Race for

all ages and abilities at Libby Hill Forest Trails, Gray, Feb. 27. Nonstopnordic.com.

Skijor Skowhegan, Skowhegan State Fairgrounds. A horse and rider pull a snowboarder or alpine skier down a 1,000' track of gates

and jumps in this team timetrial race, Feb. 26. 612-2571.

Somerset Snowfest, Skowhegan, Canaan, and Madison. Ice-fishing derby, kite-flying derby, downhill kayak race, winter biathlon, and the Northeast’s only equestrian skijoring competition, Feb. 19-27. 612-2571. Theresa Caputo, Merrill

Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St. The star of the hit TLC show Long Island Medium live, Apr. 13. 842-0800. Vicki Monroe, Jonathan’s Ogunquit, 92 Bourne Ln. An evening of spirit communication with a top psychic medium, Mar. 31. 646-4777.

Waterville Opera House, 1 Common St. Peking Acrobats, Mar. 8. 873-7000.

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censed sugar shacks open their doors for demonstrations, family activities, and samplings of syrup and other maple products. Mar. 2627. mainemapleproducers. com/events/maine-mapleweekend/#!directory/map

Chefs of Maine, 389 Congress St. Portland Food Fights: 3rd Annual Best Donuts Portland LoveFest Throwdown, through Feb. 28. 464-8311. Now You’re Cooking, 49 Front St., Bath. Facebook Live cooking demos with a rotating list of staff & local chefs, every Thu. 443-1402. To submit an event listing: portlandmonthly.com/portmag/submit-an-event/ Compiled by Diane Hudson


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FEB./MARCH 2022 67


Bridgton, Maine. Spring awakening. BridgtonMaine.org/Play


ALL PROPERTY PHOTOS COURTESY LOCATIONS REAL ESTATE GROUP LLC BY NICHOLAS La RIVIERE; ADOBE STOCK

TA LK I N G WA L L S

Shaker Simple For just $249.9K, a stunner at the still center of the world.

N

OW we’re talking. This 1820 Greek Revival landmark at 185 North Road in Bridgton is so crisply understated that every room looks like an Andrew Wyeth dry-brush painting.

All of the paneling is original, the wainscoting single-board. The magic goes down to the floorboards. “During repairs we found letters sent to the family during the Civil War,” says seller Dale Daniels, 64, a former L.L. Bean executive. HIDDEN TREASURES In a perfect setting above Woods Pond,

BY COLIN W. SARG EN T

During repairs we found letters sent to the family during the Civil War.

“This house was originally built for Carson Rose,” Daniels says. “He had a brother who lived nearby; each brother had six children.

My wife Bethany and I bought it in 1990 for $40,000. When first we came in, we were excited to see horsehair-plaster ceilings with lathes. But some of the ceilings were in rough shape, so room by room I blueboarded but kept the lathes. Then we had a FEB./MARCH 2022 69


TA LK ING WAL L S

plaster artisan come in” for the finish work. “That’s when we found the family letters. I was re-doing the living room ceiling,” his head poking up between the beams. “They were stuffed below the floorboards on the second floor.” DAZZLING RESTRAINT The grand fireplace in the salon was likely once part of the kitchen. It’s a show70 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE


stopper, swoon-worthy. “It has a working original Dutch oven and a spit. We’ve used the spit, and also made stews” in the enormous hearth. “The hardware on the doors is original. The doors are all original except the front door. When we got here, the [three] bedrooms were finished but not the hallways upstairs leading to them. From what I understand this was not uncommon.”

T

hey’re finished now, along with a full-sized post-and-beam barn Daniels made by himself “in 2005”—a symphony of wood with exquisite proportions. “A lot of the structural timbers are cut from the property here. Hemlocks.” THE TICKING OF ETERNITY The spirit of a house usually conveys, deep(Continued on page 73)

You can hear the boom of the pond when the ice breaks up. FEB./MARCH 2022 71


72 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE


TA LK I N G WA L L S

It has a working original Dutch oven and a spit. We’ve used the spit, and also made stews” in the enormous hearth.

Shaker Simple (continued from page 71)

ened by the dreams of the present occupants. “The Bridgton Historical Society has an old map with five historic houses on it. This is one of them.” From here, “you can see Shawnee Peak. From the edge of the property’s 6.7 acres, a power line cuts straight to the Pond, just 400 yards away. I’ve ice skated and ice-fished here, caught salmon and brown trout,” an experience that’s even better if you’re gliding in a “1954 (Continued on page 74)

FEB./MARCH 2022 73


TA LK ING WAL L S

Shaker Simple (continued from page 73)

Thompson lapstrake boat.” Asked for a favorite book to read here, “Bethany’s is Anne of Green Gables. She’s wild about the whole series.” What a place to read it. Outdoor entertainment includes “deer, wild turkeys. We have berries, grape vines, apple trees—Macs.” CONCRETE PARTICULARS he living space is 1,400 square feet, comprising the exquisite classic cape with ell created by “moving [three adorable small] houses behind the main house” as necessity required across the centuries—a train through time. The dreaming space is larger.

T

BRASS TACKS Break out your calculator. It’s time to do the math. The 6.7 acres are subdividable, and much of the property has highly desirable road frontage. 74 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE


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IMAGINE A WORLD SLOWED TO WALKING PACE hen we ask what piece of music best describes The Rose House, listing agent Hannah Finegold of Locations Real Estate Group, with us for this imaginary tour, stops short. “I’d like to answer that one. I’m from Maine, but I went to music school in Colorado, at the University of Denver’s Lamont School of Music. This house is a Mozart piano sonata.” That seems spot-on—maybe Sonata No. 5 in G— with the hushed trees as audience above Woods Pond, just west of Long Lake.

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wife have thrown here, Daniels says, “My forty-fifth birthday. Forty-five people.” He takes a breath. “This house is kind of like an old piece of clothing you put away because it’s going out of style and then it’s suddenly in style again. Maybe you run into it in a drawer and say, ‘Oh yes!’ Bethany sent me into L.L. Bean recently to get…a red and black checkered shirt.” As for what he did at L.L. Bean, “I managed factory quality.” Was that before they scuttled the famous 100 percent guarantee for returns? “My job was to make sure no one wanted to return anything.” n Taxes are $1,402.

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Homes & Living

Earl Bowen | 207-670-8837 Earl@Noyesrealty.com

Aimee Danforth | 207-890-3744 Aimee@Noyesrealty.com

MLS #1514006 | New Construction, 3205 sq ft, 5 Bed, 4 Bath, 3.04 Acres, Water/ Mountain Views, 8 miles/ 17 minutes to Saddleback - $1,200,000

MLS #1511349 | Beautiful location on Main Street - 6 Bed, 4 Bath 3100 sq ft, Shopping, Restaurants, Town Park, Boat Launch, Tennis, Basketball, Beach, Sled/ ATV Access, 8 miles/ 16 minutes to Saddleback - $950,000

MLS #1492872 | Own your own Restaurant, 92+ seating, 4146 sq ft, Main Street with Off Street Parking, 8 miles/ 16 minutes to Saddleback - $597,000

Earl Bowen | 207-670-8837 Earl@Noyesrealty.com

Aimee Danforth | 207-890-3744 Aimee@Noyesrealty.com

Aimee Danforth | 207-890-3744 Aimee@Noyesrealty.com

Aimee Danforth | 207-890-3744 Aimee@Noyesrealty.com

MLS #1507153 | Cute Ski Bungalow - Year-round, Single Family Home - 1 Bed, 1 Bath 765 sq ft w/1 Bed Guest Bunkhouse, 1500ft to Haines Lnding/ Mooselookmeguntic Lk, 16 miles/ 24 minutes to Saddleback - $299,000

MLS #1518709 | 1850 Restoration – 9 Bed, 9 Bath Home, 6000 sq ft, 2.8 acres with 626 feet water frontage on Flagstaff Lake, 11 miles/19 minutes to Sugarloaf USA - $899,000

MLS 1507586 | New Construction, foundation Well, Septic, Driveway, Electric to panel, Propane Tank all in, Dallas Hill Road, 5.5 mile/ 11 minutes to Saddleback - $273,000

“Your Real Estate Source for The Rangeley Region” HUNTER CV ON RANGELEY LK RANGELEY RANGELEY LAKE PLT

HALEY - 1.99 Building Parcel Offers NibobanCIRCLE Sporting Camps on Legendary Rangeley Investors Take Notice -Acre 2 2BR Cottages on Scenic Potential Mountain/Rangeley Lake Surveyed, Lake! Cabin #4 End Unit Abutting theViews. Woods, Fully Hunter Cove w/Good Rental Potential. Both Camps Soils Tested, Power at Street. Snowmobile Friendly Year-Round, Private Flag Stone Patio. Once You are Fully Year-Round, Well Maintained, Furniture Location Close to Town, Saddleback, 4-Season Arrive, You’ll Never Want To Leave! $279,900 Included. Protected Frontage w/Dock, Small Boat Recreation. $53,500Lake/Mt Views. $425,000 Launch. Panoramic

SANDY RIVER PLT RANGELEY RANGELEY PLANTATiON

Caryn Dreyfuss Broker

Well Wooded Acre Parcel Offers Potential Views Million Dollar2+Views From This Hillside in GREAT HOME, GREAT LOCATION! LodgeLot Style of Beaver Lake! Possible Building Desirable Rangeley West 1.8 Acre 3BR HomeMt with LightSeveral FilledSubdivision! Great Room, Professional Sites Tow/Direct Choose From. LocatedTrail Directly Across the Parcel Snowmobile Access, Minutes Kitchen, Master Suite. Attached 4-Car Garage, Street FromATV/Snowmobile Deeded LakeAbutting Access w/Small Boat to Oquossoc Amenities. Lot Also Generator, from Your Door,Available All on 10 Launch. $85,000 For Purchase. $115,000 for each Acres. $425,000

RANGELEY - THE SAddLEBAcK quiMBY PONd iSLODGES BAcK! KING OFMountainside THE HILL to Own Building Lot inEnjoyment! theWoods Lodges. Underground Super RockRARE PondOpportunity Condo is1BR Ready for aYour Immediate Beautifully SUPER SWEET on VIEWS! Quimby Pond! Seasonal Cottage Loaded w/North Charm Offers ComfortPower, Public Town, Saddleback and 4-Season Activities. Appointed 3BR, 2BA withMinutes Sun FilledtoPond/Mt Floor Plan, Mt./Saddleback Lake Level Views. Plus Rangeley Lake w/ able Living All Water/Sewer. on OneUnit Level! Fabulous Views, Spacious Deck. Lawn to Plus 100’ATV/ Frontage Snowmobile Friendly. $199,000 Resort Time Share Week Included. $329,000 Dock. Peaceful, Quiet Setting. $245,000

RANGELEY SANdY THE LOdGES RivER PLT

Million Dollar Views From This Offers Hillside Lot DeWell Wooded 2+ Acre Parcel Potential Savor the Panoramic Rangeley Lake andinSunset sirable West Subdivision! 1.8Condo. AcreBuildParcel Views From ofRangeley Beaver Mt Lake! Several Possible Views This Gently Used 4BR, 2BA w/Direct Trail Access. Surveyed, Soils ing Sites Snowmobile To Choose From. Directly Across Well-Appointed Tri-Level UnitLocated w/Spacious Open Tested. Minutes to Oquossoc Amenities, Rangeley, the Street FromEasy Deeded LakeAccess, Access1-Car w/Small Living Spaces, Sled Trail Garage, Saddleback. Boat Furnished. Launch. $114,900 $95,000 Sold $319,000

dALLAS PLT RANGELEY PHILLIPS

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Super Opportunity To Live andHome Work in Western Wooded, 1 Acre Building Lotw/ in the Private/Quiet Neat as aLevel Pin Ranch Style 2BR, Mountains ofFloor Maine! Well Established Auto Repair Setting. Nice SpotPlan, Ideally Located 4-season Comfortable Covered Car for Port, Metal Roof, Garage with Generator. High Visibility Setting and Easy Adventures, Saddleback Lake & Saddleback Mt. On-Demand Roomy Farmers Porch, Quiet Access to Route 4. Handy to Rangeley, Farmington, are Nearby. Snowmobile Friendly, Short Drive to Country Setting, Close to No-Motors Quimby Pond. Kingfield. $699,000 $40,000 Rangeley Amenities. $239,000

Rangeley Overlook – Potential & MtYet Views Tucked Away Off the Beaten Lake Path and Handy Beautifully Crafted Log-Sided Chalet w/ 3-BR, From This 1 Acre Building Easy Snowmobile To Everything! Generous 7Lot. Acre Wood in Quiet Cook’s Kitchen, Open Floor Plan. Sited on 9Lot Private Trail Access, Rights To HOLA Association Setting. BuildDeeded Here and Minutes Public Boat Acres w/Deeded Access toBePond Brook.To Fish/Paddle Waterfront on Rangeley Lake. Close to Town, Pond. Ramps, Oquossoc $62,000 the Magalloway River,Amenities. Umbagog Lake, Sturtevant Saddleback $282,500 Ski Area. $65,900

78 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE

(207) 233-8275

caryndreyfuss@morton-furbish.com

2478 Main Street • P.O. Box 1209 Rangeley, Maine 04970 www.realestateinrangeley.com


Is a move in your future? Call Cindy Olsen today and you will be in excellent hands!

Cindy Olsen

CindyEOlsen@gmail.com (207) 650-1627 “Best REALTOR® in the area, hands down. I wouldn’t have bought and then sold my condo or be in my current house if it wasn’t for Cindy. Any REALTOR® can show houses, but Cindy’s expertise and support throughout the entire process is what sets her apart.” - Portland Client

2021 SALES HIGHLIGHTS

11 Angell Point Road Cape Elizabeth

23 Emerson Street, Unit 1 Portland

71 Essex Street Portland

Buyer Represented | $1,060,000

Seller & Buyer Represented | $789,900

Seller Represented | $785,000

388 Ocean Street South Portland

8 Maneta Drive Saco

86 Carlyle Road Portland

Buyer Represented | $640,000

Buyer Represented | $605,000

Buyer Represented | $575,000

29 Chickadee Lane Durham

5 Cumberland Avenue, Unit 3 Portland

119 Hennessy Drive Portland

Seller Represented | $509,000

Seller Represented | $460,000

Seller Represented | $425,000

LOCATION

IS EVERYTHING! 190 US Route One, Falmouth, Maine www.LocationsInMaine.com FEB./MARCH 2022 79


Homes & Living

John Hatcher A House SOLD Name ® (207)775-2121 C O M I N G

www.thgmaine.com

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Portland New Construction Condo $595,000 1 Bed | 1 Bath www.218washington.com

Portland New Construction Condo $1,295,000 2 Bed | 2 Bath www.218washington.com John Hatcher • The Hatcher Group 6 Deering Street, Portland, Maine 04101 207-775-2121 • jhatcher@kw.com • www.thgmaine.com

80 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE


Homes & Living

Please contact us for all your real estate needs!

We want you to know that during this unusual time we continue to do mortgages throughout

Debbie Andrews Judy Andrews

Devon Havey

Gayle Clancy

Ruth Smith

Tricia Cote

WWW.ANDREWSMILLIGAN.COM • 207-985-5525 • info@andrewsmilligan.com • 24 Main Street Kennebunk 04043

The right real estate agent makes all the difference!

It would be my honor to help you buy or sell your home.

Mary Sue Mainella Realtor

207.233.4686 marysue@c21ne.com marysuerealty.com lic # SA921002

The Official Real Estate Company of the Boston Bruins

48 Free Street, Portland, Maine FEB./MARCH 2022 81


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New Portland. Middle Rd. Unique property has 75 acres with fields, forests, trees, barns andHere pasture. Original Beautiful western mountains LOOKING FORfruit WATERFRONT? is one of our1800’s several cape that has been renovated with the modern features of today. of Maine. listings. Cape on4 80 waterfront bd acres 3 bath with ROW to water and near boat Cherry wood work. Hardwood floors. Attached garage plus 2 of fieldsand andpublic forest! Dead$380,000. end launch beach. CSM has water front homes, barns. Currently a working farmHatchery with lots mtns of animals! 35 mins to road in and Salem Fish Rd. Fireplace. 3 bed, camps landTownship. in the beautiful western of Maine. Spring Sugarloaf. $525,000 2 baths plus additional large sunroom. andstreams. building/ Lake, Flagstaff Lake, Embden Pond andGarage rivers and

workshop. Fruit trees and berry bushes. $395,000 MAINKINGFIELD STREET, KINGFIELD 259 MAIN259 STREET, 259 MAIN STREET,|KINGFIELD CSMREALESTATE.COM | 207-265-4000 CSMREALESTATE.COM 207-265-4000 CSMREALESTATE.COM | 207-265-4000 JANET@CSMREALESTATE.COM JANET@CSMREALESTATE.COM

Kelly Wentworth-Lowe Wentworth-Lowe Kelly Sales Manager Sales Manager Freeport, Maine Freeport, Maine (207) 831-4934 (207) 831-4934 kelly@kellywentworth.com Gilbert D. (Specs) Eaton III (207) 491-5150 specseaton@gmail.com

Kelly Wentworth-Lowe Sales Manager (207) 831-4934 kelly@kellywentworth.com

Freeport - Building Lot Millinocket – Year Round Home Island Falls – Waterfront Lot This 50 x 50 lot is in the VC zone (VilSweeping views of the Katahdin Range Pleasant Lake 1.7 acre lot with 152-feet lage/Commercial). There are several on the shores of South Twin Lake. of pristine clear spring fed waterfront upgrades to the lot; foundation, garage Private sandy beach with over 250’ feet on Pleasant Lake. Over 1800 acres S#1406473 (Land) MLS#1406283 (Land & House) MLS#1312731 pad,36), power, sewerCommons, and water are in of crystal clear water front. with a depth Rosewood Lane (Lot Cobb Bridge 33 Bluff Head Rd, Chebeague Island,The ME cottage Millinocket – Year Round Home Island Falls – Waterfront Lot of 60” and home to many w Gloucester, ME place. A home design has been created offers an open fl oor plan on the fi rst types of fish.152-feet Year round adventure Sweeping views of the Katahdin on the shores ofand Views! Cottage Pleasant Lake 1.7 acre lot with of pristine clearfor bbs Bridge Commons is an upscale community close to a RangeBeaches, Mooring, sited atop Bluff Head by Waltman Architectural. Create fl oor with two bedrooms and two baths all—swimming, kayaking, fi shing, ATV, South Twin Lake. Private over 250’ feet spring fed waterfront on Pleasant Lake. Over 1800 acres nswick, L/A and Portland. The subdivision offerssandy privacy,beach with Rock outcropping. Motivated seller, recent favorable interest unique living style (condo living) without on the second fl oor. One side of the snowmobiling and more. lking trail to the Royal River and is close to Fox Ridge thisasweet strong of crystal clear water front. TheGolf cottagerates, offersand ancharming open location make with depthspot of worth 60” and home to many types of fish. Year associated fees. Located on Morse cottage a three season room and urse. The land is the listed $59,900 or with new with home for bedrooms consideration. $449,500 floorforplan on the first afloor two and has two round adventure for$250,000 all—swimming, kayaking, fishing, ATV, Street, you can walk to Main Street the lake porch. 79,900 baths on the second floor. One side of the on cottage hasside a a covered snowmobiling and more. for shopping, theater, dining, schools $395,000 three season room and on the lake side a covered porch. $250,000 18 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An Independently owned the and operated BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol and parks and Bow franchisee Street of Market. $395,000are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc. Equal Housing Opportunity. $195,000 ®

©2018 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An Independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity.

82 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE


M I C H E L E PE R E J DA Senior Vice President | Broker 207.400.6227 mperejda@legacysir.com

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Homes & Living

www.Morton-Furbish.com James L. Eastlack, Owner Broker 207-864-5777 or 207-670-5058 | JLEastlack@gmail.com

2013 Parmachenee Road - BOSEBUCK MTN CAMPS - 12 SPRING LAKE – Escape to–nature andLAKE a wonderful 1322 Main Street – BEAVER parkwaterfront likePine, setting, RANGELEY LAKE VIEWS 100MTN. Proctor Rd –- AShadow a year round rental cabins, Main Dining Lodge with full comproperty a great remote ofacres, water. Off grid extremely private location, 348.32 beds, 2.5 baths, 596w/generator, feet of Views, one of a on kind property withbody Saddleback Mtn mercial kitchen, 1200 ofdetached lakefront on Aziscohos year round building, detached garage, fish, enjoy all Rangeley Lake Views, 6feet beds, 6OWNED baths,Ice5+ carhunt, garages, addition waterfront, attached garage, garage, potential Lake, 15+available acres offorland! $2,200,000. 40 acres purchase! $1,495,000.

seasons! $495,000. guest cottage. $775,000.

6 Spring Lake -– Great off grid cabin on Lake! 100 RANGELEY LAKE Lakeside Marina &AConvenience Wonderful 20 VistaLAKE Lane LAKE rareSpring offering, SPRING –– 6RANGELEY Spring Lake Rd -–Escape to nature- the andBuena a feet in depth, year round fishing, hunting, snowmobiling and business opportuinty inproperty downtown zoning, convenience Vista Estate on 567 feet of deep private acres wonderful waterfront on water acommercial greatfrontage,53 remote body of water. relaxing! Great construction, detached garage, 165 feet of store, 25w/generator, boat slips, gas, rental business, great waterfront Off grid yearboat round building, detached garage, Ice w/south facing exposure, total privacy, development potential. waterfront! $495,000. fish, hunt, enjoy all seasons! $495,000.

771 Main Street - SANDY RIVERtoLAKE POND great deal ! 631 Bald Mtn. Road –Located MOOSELOOK – -AA rare offering, PINE GROVE LANE the village with expansive RANGELEY LAKE – –2582 Mainclose St - cabin Wonderful commercial thisbath adorable 2 bed, 2.bath on the water in San4Finish bed, 4.5 contemporary lakefront home w/beach, detached southwest views of Rangeley Lake, 4 beds, 3.5 baths, very close business on Main Street w/ 105' on Rangeley Lake, Marina/ dy River Plantation.....waterfront, all interior work to finished, garage AND private island w/2 bedroom cottage, to Saddleback Ski Area, andguest ATV from your 3.56 doorstep, Convenience Store, 25+snowmobile Slips, Gas, Shop, Downtown gorgeous back drop,High full Traffic year round building! $369,000. Commercial Zoning, Location, $965,000. Acres! $1,899,000. heated garage! $639,000.

7 Pond Street -–ECOPELAGICON NATURE STORE -Lake First 277 Stephens Road – MOOSELOOK LAKE facing PROCTOR ROAD Gorgeous overlooking Rangeley RANGELEY LAKE VIEWS – 21VIEWS Pinewell Grove -–4West Beds, 3.5 Baths, time on the market, unique and established Rangeley Sandy Beach frontage, 4 bed, 3 bath home w/attached 3 car and Saddleback Ski Area, wonderful estate property located just Fully Furnished, SW facing views w/LOTS of sun, Snowmobile business located 100 feet of Haley Pond Frontage, a w/ heated and on detached 3Detached car garage w/large bonus room! outside the Rangeley village, 48.32 Acres,4 bed,4.5 bath home and ATVgarage from your doorstep, 32x32 garage fully wonderful building wonderful location! $590,000. heated, a must see! and $639,000. $850,000. guest quarters. $1,495,000.

84 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE

location! $965,000. $2,650,000.


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FEB./MARCH 2022 85



LA ST WORDS ation capacity of the country with hydroelectric installations in 2025. What it takes to charge the battery of a top-of-the-line Tesla would charge forty of SGV’s electric motorcycles specifically designed to be plugged into any standard household outlet. Everybody gracious enough to ride one says it’s a game changer. [See details and specifications of the bikes and their impact at sanguoventures.com.] n

Colin S. Sargent, Elida Mwanza, Evan Liu, Fr Joseph Czerwinski SDB, Jackob Chagwilila, Emanuel Sapuwa From Malawi with Love (continued from page 88)

MADE IN MALAWI he MM125 electric motorcycle, SGV’s first product, is adapted from the Honda CG design with the original engine and drivetrain removed, brought to production with assistance and investment from FCA Corp, a Houstonbased asset management firm, via the private-equity fund Africap. SGV is proud to have introduced another first in Malawi: a private certification for electric-vehicle technicians, developed in partnership with Isaac Banda, head of Automobile Mechanics at the technical institute.

COURTESY PHOTO

T

SGV co-founder Colin S. Sargent (far left) credits his education at Cheverus High School (a guiding principle is “People for Others”) in Portland as instrumental in his drive to launch SGV with fellow Northeastern University graduate Evan Liu of Dallas, Texas. Evan and Colin would love your feedback about accelerating the adoption of electric motorcycles in southern Africa; creating opportunities in STEM for women in that region; and beginning the work of training and deploying technicians right now for the coming electric mobility transition in sub-Saharan Africa, where over 9.5 million carbureted gasoline-powered motorcycles without catalytic converters are sold every year. It’ll be a big job to replace or convert all of these, but it can be done. Let’s start a conversation via letters to the Editor of Portland Magazine, on Instagram @sgvelectricmobility, or via email to directors@sanguoventures.com. Keep an eye on our Chowder section for future updates on all the jobs the Don Bosco motorcycle does.

“This is the one that I earned my certificate on.” Mwanza waves to the cycle, proud of her own role in the shared dream. “I am the one who has made this bike!” Applause resounds through the church. [youtube. com/watch?v=wzG-IH6HQN0] 7,500 MILES, MAINE TO MALAWI Success does not have to be a zero-sum game. Because Malawi has never had enough money to build a coal plant, ninety percent of its electricity is generated from renewable sources, mostly hydroelectric and solar. A French public-private partnership will nearly double the power-gener-

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LA ST WORDS

From Malawi with Love An electric conversion touches many hearts with multiple community benefits.

H

B Y COLIN S. SARG EN T

ere in Lilongwe, the rains are late. Everyone you talk to on the street is worried that when the torrents do come, they’ll be too heavy.

WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING Which magnifies the eerie beauty of a January summer Sunday, 2022. Just before the 8 o’clock service (Malawi time is seven hours ahead during Maine’s winter) at Don Bosco Catholic Parish of Lilongwe, the doors fling open as Father Joseph Czerwinski rides up the aisle to the altar on a new motorcycle that makes no sound. “I used to ride bikes a lot, when I was young and beautiful. Now I’m only beautiful.” He turns to his amused congregation and gestures to the sleek vehicle, “a most welcome donation” from Sanguo Ventures Limited (SGV), the area’s first electric-motorcycle 88 P O R T L A N D MAGAZINE

I made this bike!

assembly operation, —Elida Mwanza launched in 2017 to develop electric vehicles for the Southern African market. “As you know, the roads are terrible, so the minibuses don’t reach us and all the work has had to be done on the motorbike taxis. We’ll be keeping a careful record of all the jobs this new gift will handle for our parish and how much money those jobs would have cost on the taxis.” Having an all-electric motorcycle can save such a parish $50,000 (USD) over five years, allowing church teachers to move around, emergency transportation to hospitals, home health care, midwife outreach services, and meal delivery to elderly parishioners. The shiny anomaly stands front and center during the recognizably Catholic but decidedly Afrobeat-flavored service. What would Jesus say?

INCLUSION: ESSENTIAL TO THE DREAM Elida Mwanza, 25, ascends the pulpit and takes the mike—a day after earning her certificate as an electric-vehicle technician, and just over a year after completing her studies in Automobile Mechanics at Don Bosco Youth Technical Institute. “Thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak to you all. These electric motorcycles don’t use fuel but instead use three units of electricity (thirteen cents each) to go eighty miles. They are cheap to maintain because they don’t use a gearbox or a chain, and they also make no pollution.” (Continued on page 87)

COURTESY PHOTOS

That’ll flatten the corn, you see, and corn grown on a fifty- by fifty-yard plot is the staple on which eight in ten families depend in this southern African capital city. If the harvest isn’t good, Malawi will have to import food, creating a real cash crunch for fuel. Long lines at the gas stations again, with disheartening prices. At least a New Year’s Eve thunderstorm has turned all the brown to green to get the crows cawing.


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