It can mean any of the above and also any property ranging from a patch of land with a tent to fancy home with all amenities. |
And there are ticks as far south as NC, right? And the weather sucks anywhere south of NYC. |
You have tick issues from Maine to southern Virginia. And anywhere on the East Coast is inundated by mosquitoes during the summer. It's pretty much impossible to get away from these pests without traveling west or to Europe. |
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I love Maine but I think you're better off renting than buying. Why be on the hook for maintenance, taxes, etc. for a place you can't really use most of the year? Maine is NO FUN in the cold and snow. And as we've seen, the state will bar you from coming in to use your own property in a covid situation. Use the money to rent a fabulous place on a lake or in Bar Harbor.
- My parents live in Maine |
+1 -My dad married into a family with a Maine camp, and so did I. Wonderful places. So much maintenance. |
| We have family with a place in Maine that they offered to us for a month this summer but after reading about the hospital capacity on Mt Desert island we are leaning against going. |
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I know people who do this. It sounds horrible. They don't even have hot water! And the toilet doesn't sound like it flushes all the way.
Anyway, they got Lyme disease. |
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A good friend married a guy whose family has one. It's on a lake and super rustic. No electricity and I am not sure there's even running water. Her DH goes up there in the middle of winter with friends to cut ice from the lake to put in the icebox where it lasts until they get there in July.
She loves it b/c she has three outdoorsy boys and it's great family time and no screens at all but I think she sees it a little bit as a burden too. It's sort of mandated that they spend at least a week there every year, this included when all three kids were infants (!) and she may prefer to go somewhere else once in a while. |
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We rented one two summers ago. It was a quaint lake house that did have AC, hot water and electricity. But the internet wasn't that great. I wouldn't call it high speed and I was told they couldn't get better internet in their town.
While I enjoyed it, the water was cold even in August and at night we wore sweaters. The town we were in had a lot going for it at night- bonfires, dances and an outdoor family sort of environment. |
| There are a million affordable places to rent in Maine (even directly on the water). I'd rent for a couple of seasons before buying. |
This sounds great - which lake/town was this? |
| Reading this thread I realize that while I think of myself as loving the outdoors, and I do, I also definitely don't have any desire to do 'vacation' without creature comforts. I want a long hot shower after a day of hiking and wine one the deck and/or hot tub and outdoor speakers. Guess I'm not as rustic as I thought I was. Might change when my kids get a little older though, right now it feels like "vacation" is the 1-2 hours between them going to sleep and myself passing out before getting up at the butt crack of dawn for beach/hiking/whatever |
I have a friend who retired to MDI, but had to leave when his spouse became ill, because of the hospital situation (or lack thereof). They moved to a small town on the Gulf Coast, if that tells you how bad the situation in Maine was. I love MDI, but I once injured my knee there, and there was one orthopedist on the island, and they told me he was completely booked and couldn't see me. I went to the "Emergency Room" (such as it was) and they took me to his office and he was kind enough to see me after hours. Turns out he lived in Alexandria and was there part-time for the summer. Nice guy, and patched me well enough to survive until I got home, but I definitely wouldn't want to be there for a serious medical emergency. |
Bump. Anyone have recs for fun Maine lake towns? If not for this summer, then for next? |
This is my parents' complaint in Maine. Also, looking at a second Gulf Coast location for lots of reasons. |