PATTEN, MAINE — One-hundred-fifty kilos of white beans topped with thick slabs of salt pork, molasses and mustard had been positioned in giant iron pots and lowered into specifically dug holes layered with scorching wooden coals on Friday.
The ritual was executed in preparation for Patten’s annual Bean Gap Bean Dinner held the following day on the Patten Lumbermen’s Museum.
The occasion, all the time on the second Saturday in August, has been honoring the heritage of Maine’s famed river drivers who moved tens of millions of logs downriver towards marketplace for greater than half a century, though it took a break in 2020 due to COVID-19.
Saturday was no exception as crowds lined up for plates of the standard beans, coleslaw, biscuits, gingerbread and extra.
“We’ve had not less than 600 to 700 individuals right here,” mentioned Ron Blum, a member of the Lumbermen’s Museum board of administrators, on Saturday afternoon. “It’s good to see everybody right here after the COVID hiatus.”
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The dinner opened to the general public at 11 a.m. and by 2 p.m. solely three pots of beans remained. By 2:30 p.m., the reflector oven Bakewell Cream biscuits had been nearly gone.
As board members Harlan Prescott and Ricky Merrill hoisted one other steaming pot of beans from the coals to hold to the serving station, a number of individuals referred to as over, “You probably did a fantastic job on the beans.”
“You actually obtained it proper.”
Proceeds from the dinner assist fund the museum.
Prescott, who helped put together the beans for cooking on Friday, mentioned the stuffed pots weigh about 80 kilos every.
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“Onions, molasses, salt and pepper,” mentioned Prescott, describing the recipe, which is analogous to the one camp cooks used within the 1800s for hungry river drivers.
The wood-fired beans had been hearty, and Saturday’s batch was cooked to perfection, not too smooth and never too arduous with the sauce making them a bit like thick bean soup. And with every chunk, there was a tongue tingle, seeming to return from black pepper and maybe a secret ingredient Prescott didn’t point out.
Heavy iron pots boiled cups and cups of Maxwell Home espresso and Maine’s personal purple scorching canines. As wooden smoke wafted via the bushes in the summertime afternoon breeze, there was a promise of fall within the air.
The biscuits had been lined onto the shelf of the reflector oven in entrance of the fireplace, and identical to in a conventional oven, they took about 20 minutes to bake.
The occasion’s setting on the museum with the historic iron pots cooking over coals was paying homage to the river drivers’ meals that fed tons of a number of occasions a day.
In keeping with an 1877 Lewiston Solar Journalstory, 4 barrels of beans, half a barrel of pork, one barrel of flour, half a barrel of meal, 1 / 4 of a barrel of sugar and 5 gallons of molasses had been used every single day on the camps.
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On Saturday, members of the Borrowed Thyme band performed lumberjack music that added to the general really feel of the historic occasion.
The band, lacking their chief, Terry Levesque, on Saturday, performed blues, rock and roll and previous nation.
Left to proper, Lumberman’s Museum Board member Harlan Prescott and volunteer Ricky Merrill hoist an 80-pound iron pot full of bean gap beans in the course of the annual dinner. Members of the group Borrowed Thyme performed lumber camp music throughout a Bean Gap Bean Dinner in Patten. Credit score: Kathleen Phalen Tomaselli / Particular to Houlton Pioneer Occasions
Three Maine authors had been additionally on the bean dinner to speak about their books and signal copies.
A part of the Maine Authors Publishing cooperative, Claire Ackroyd, Laurie Apgar Chandler and Deborah A. Walder shared their information of Maine coloured by their very own experiences of their books.
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“We inform tales about Maine,” mentioned Ackroyd who just lately printed her novel, Homicide within the Maple Woods. “Folks actually love to seek out issues about Maine. It’s been an surprising reward.”
The three ladies are slated to discuss their books on the Presque Isle Public Library in September.
Additionally at Saturday’s dinner had been horse-drawn wagon rides with John and Linda Boyce and horses Champ and Cherry and blacksmithing and wood-turning demonstrations.
Maine State Police responded to more than 50 crashes and road slide-offs Saturday after southern Maine woke up to some light snowfall.
Police were responding to several crashes on the Maine Turnpike (Interstate 95) and Interstate 295 south of Augusta, state police said in a Facebook message posted around 10 a.m. Saturday.
Maine State Police spokesperson Shannon Moss said that as of early Saturday afternoon, more than 50 crashes had been reported on the turnpike and I-295.
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“The Turnpike has seen 24 crashes and slide offs primarily between Kittery and Falmouth with a higher concentration in Saco,” Moss wrote in an email. “The interstate has seen about 30 crashes and slide offs also in the Falmouth area but now in Lincoln and heading north.”
Moss said no injuries have been reported in any of the crashes.
“So far it appears visibility and driving too fast for road conditions are the causation factors,” Moss said.
State police reminded drivers to take caution, especially during snowy conditions, in the Facebook post.
“Please drive with extra care and give yourself plenty of space between you and the other vehicles on the roadway,” the post said. “Give the MDOT and Turnpike plows extra consideration and space to do their jobs to clear the roadway. Drive slow, plan for the extra time to get to your destination and be safe.”
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New rules that went into effect in August changing who pays real estate commissions have resulted in more paperwork and some anxiety for home buyers and sellers but have had little, if any, impact on home prices in the state’s hot real estate market.
The changes, which stem from a settlement in a lawsuit accusing real estate agents of conspiring to keep their commissions high, altered the way commission fees are set nationally.
For decades, most home sales in the United States have included a commission fee, typically between 5 and 6 percent of the sale price.
The typical Maine home went for around $400,000 this fall. A 5 to 6 percent commission on a $400,000 home would be between $20,000 and $24,000, split between the agents for the buyer and the seller.
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Before the changes in August, the split for each agent was predetermined by the seller, who paid the fee for both agents. That usually resulted in fees being baked into the list price of a home.
In some states (although not in Maine) agents were able to search the multiple listing service, a catalogue of homes for sale, by the commission split, which critics said incentivized agents to steer clients toward more expensive properties with higher commissions.
Now, fees are negotiated sale-by-sale. Buyers and sellers are now each responsible for paying their own agents, meaning a buyer may have to come with more cash up front if a seller doesn’t want to pay the commission fee for a buyer’s agent. Sellers are also no longer allowed to include commission fees in their listings.
Tacy Ridlon, a listing agent with Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate The Masiello Group in Ellsworth, who has been in real estate for 32 years, said it is a bit jarring to have a conversation with buyers about whether they are willing to pay part of their agent’s commission.
Once the commission is established and the agreement signed, she said, the buyer’s agent then approaches the seller’s agent to see what part of their commission the seller is willing to cover, if any.
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Ridlon said 3 percent for the buyer’s agent is a typical starting point.
“We have to start high. If the seller is willing to offer 2 percent for the buyer’s agent, then our buyer only has to pay one percent… If the seller is not offering anything, then we ask the buyer to pay a certain amount. Some can pay and some can’t. For some it’s very difficult because they don’t have a lot of money to play around with.”
Some agents said they found the changes minimal; others find the paperwork and negotiating with buyers daunting. One agency owner said the ruling has done little to bring prices down.
“This ruling has done nothing to save buyers or sellers any money,” said Billy Milliken, a designated broker and owner of Bold Coast Properties, LLC, in Jonesport. “If anything, it’s made the cost of buying a home even more expensive.”
Milliken said his sellers have had no problem agreeing to pay both buyers’ and sellers’ commissions. The cost has been embedded in the price of the property.
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“The real loser is first time home buyers who are not educated in buying a home and also have limited cash resources,” said Milliken. “It puts them at a disadvantage.”
The change has resulted in some confusion for many buyers and even some agents around the country, as rules differ from state-to-state.
People are slowly getting used to the changes, said Monet Yarnell, president of the Midcoast Board of Realtors, who owns her own agency, Sell 207 in Belfast, adding that Maine’s real estate practices were already more transparent than many other areas of the country.
“I think it was a little confusing in the beginning, more doom and gloom,” said Yarnell. But sellers are still incentivized to offer something to the buyers’ agents, she said. And the changes have increased the level of communication between agents and their clients.
“It’s more how the money flows rather than the actual dollars.”
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Ridlon, in Ellsworth, said she has been fortunate that most sellers have offered some compensation toward the buyer’s agent commission. “I have not had a buyer who can’t do the 3 percent.”
Ridlon had one seller who was not willing to pay any part of the buyer’s agent’s commission. The property had a lot of showings, but many of the buyers asked for closing costs to be covered or for concessions in lieu of picking up part of the commission.
“That didn’t really work for my seller either,” she said. “Then he relented and said he would pay one percent.”
The property sold.
Debbie Walter sold her condominium in Stockton Springs via Yarnell and then bought another condominium in New London, N.H., with another real estate agent.
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“We’re kind of guinea pigs,” said Walter. “We were very concerned about that whole piece, both as sellers and buyers.”
Fearful the sale of their house might not proceed smoothly the couple readily agreed to pay a 3 percent commission for the buyer’s agent.
When they made their offer to buy the condominium in N.H., they offered as buyers to cover their buyer’s agent’s commission as well. But the seller in that case took an equally cautious approach and offered to cover 2.5 percent of the buyer’s agent’s commission, which Walters’ agent accepted.
“It was very stressful,” Walter said. Offering to cover their buyer’s agent’s commission, she said, created “one less headache for the whole closing procedure.”
Tom McKee, president of the Maine Realtors Association, said the settlement and new rules have had little impact.
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“It hasn’t changed anything for me,” said McKee, who is with Keller Williams in Portland. Now that the commission split is no longer listed in the M.L.S., said McKee, “there are just more questions in the transaction.”
McKee said there is no set percentage, that everything is negotiable.
“If we do our job right and are meeting with the client first, they already understand.”
The Maine Supreme Judicial Court has proposed new rules governing judicial conduct complaints that would keep members of the high court from having to discipline their peers.
The proposed rules would establish a panel of eight judges — the four most senior active Superior Court justices and the four most senior active District Court judges who are available to serve — to weigh complaints against a justice of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court. Members of the high court would not participate.
The rule changes come just weeks after the Committee on Judicial Conduct recommended the first sanction against a justice on the Maine Supreme Judicial Court in state history.
The committee said Justice Catherine Connors should be publicly reprimanded, the lowest level of sanction, for failing to recuse herself in two foreclosure cases last year that weakened protections for homeowners in Maine, despite a history of representing banks that created a possible conflict of interest. Connors represented or filed on behalf of banks in two precedent-setting cases that were overturned by the 2024 decisions.
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In Maine, it’s up to the Supreme Judicial Court to decide the outcome of judicial disciplinary cases. But because in this case one of the high court’s justices is accused of wrongdoing, the committee recommended following the lead of several other states by bringing in a panel of outside judges, either from other levels of the court or from out of state.
Connors, however, believes the case should be heard by her colleagues on the court, according to a response filed late last month by her attorney, James Bowie.
Bowie argued that the outcome of the case will ultimately provide guidance for the lower courts — a power that belongs exclusively to the state supreme court.
It should not, he wrote, be delegated “to some other ad hoc grouping of inferior judicial officers.”
The court is accepting comments on the proposal until Jan. 23. The changes, if adopted, would be effective immediately and would apply to pending matters, including the Connors complaint.