Maine Life
"Why is Maine so..." According to Google
Submitted by Down East Guest B... on Wed, 08/15/2012 - 11:22am.Blogger and venture capitalist Renee DiResta recently moved from New York to San Francisco and started wondering how people across the United States viewed those from other states. To answer her question she plugged into Google the question "Why is [state] so" and let the search auto-complete. DiResta recorded the top four suggested ways to autocomplete the question and posted the results on her blog No Upside.
Boy Featured in Wyeth Painting Opens Lobster Processing Plant
Submitted by Down East Guest B... on Tue, 08/14/2012 - 1:33pm.In 1999, artist Jamie Wyeth painted a portrait of a young Monhegan boy standing in front of a sign that said "Kyle's Dead Cat Museum." Wearing a cape and beckoning tourists to see mummified cats, Kyle Murdoch had an entrepreneurial spirit (albeit a slightly macabre one) from an early age. Now 23, Murdoch has left the dead cat market and the cape behind but kept his enthusiasm for interesting business ventures.
Crafts: How to Refinish a New England Bureau
Submitted by Down East Guest B... on Mon, 08/13/2012 - 2:38pm.
The Yankee Crafty B*tch teaches you how to spruce up that old New England bureau in need of some love.
Martha Stewart Blogs Maine
Submitted by Down East Guest B... on Fri, 08/10/2012 - 10:38am.Martha Stewart lives a dream Maine life and isn't shy about sharing it with her millions of fans. From her sixty-acre property, Skylands, that overlooks Seal Harbor on Mount Desert Island, Stewart has been blogging extensively about her Maine adventures in the last few weeks. If you want to experience Martha's Maine (and who doesn't?) you can live vicariously through her as she....
From Blueberries to Balloons: Six Upcoming August Festivals
Submitted by Down East Guest B... on Wed, 08/08/2012 - 2:20pm.
The Great Falls Balloon Fest. Photo by Arlene McConnell.
The sea goddess of the Maine Lobster Festival has been crowned, and the lobster floats may not return to Rockland's Main Street for another year, but festival season is still in full swing in Maine. Whether you love balloons, blueberries, antiques, Acadian culture, or boats, there's something for you in the upcoming weeks. Have fun!
A Prize-winning Wild Blueberry Recipe
Submitted by Down East Guest B... on Mon, 08/06/2012 - 7:02am.Lobsters aren't the only thing we have in abundance in Maine this summer. Wild blueberry growers are expecting the biggest harvest in a decade — 90 to 95 million pounds.
Take a Dip in Maine's Best Lake Beaches
Submitted by Down East Guest B... on Mon, 08/06/2012 - 7:00am.If you're looking for a place to take a swim this August head inland. Yes, Maine has 3,500 miles of coastline, but we also have 2,500 lakes and ponds that are better (and warmer) for a casual swim. Here are 12 of Maine's best lake beaches:
Damariscotta Lake, Jefferson
Lobster Glut's Ripple Effect Reaches Connecticut, New Brunswick
Submitted by Down East Guest B... on Fri, 08/03/2012 - 2:42pm.The soft-shell lobster glut that is threatening Maine lobstermen's ability to make a living is now being felt in Connecticut and New Brunswick.
Buttermilk the Goat Gets Facebook Page, Appears on Politics Nation with Al Sharpton
Submitted by Down East Guest B... on Fri, 08/03/2012 - 11:00am.Buttermilk, the adorable Nigerian dwarf goat from Houlton last seen doing 360 degree Parkour-style back flips off her goat friends, now has her own Facebook page and has been making the talk show circuit. If you haven't seen the video of Buttermilk that over a week has racked up nearly 3,000,000 views and earned a spot on The Today Show, we'll wait for you to watch and then finish smiling uncontrollably:
Of Prisoners and Lobsters
Submitted by Down East Guest B... on Thu, 08/02/2012 - 11:40am.As lobstermen, dealers, scientists, and others in Maine's lobster industry worry about the overabundance of lobsters, we are reminded of the oft-repeated stories that lobster was so plentiful in the 17th and 18th centuries that it was considered a junk food. Indeed, these stories go, colonial Massachusetts even passed a law forbidding the serving of lobsters to servants and prisoners more than twice a week — that would be cruel!










