Anonymous wrote:I live in Brunswick on its outskirts. Popham and Reid beaches are more like 40 mins away. Range Pond SP is also 40 mins.
Anonymous wrote:Based on 12 years experience with family vacations and many years of sleep away camps for the kids (always tucked away in tiny towns/ if you can even call them that) I’ve learned there are 2 types of people in Maine. You’ve got the summer people and the townies. Once the summer people leave you are left with druggies, the morbidly obese, and the redneck hillbilly types.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you spent time there? I would caution you to spend some time there in the winter (and late fall, late spring:early summer. Not uncommon to have cold temps and snow in may. Also, be aware it gets dark very early in the winter. Like 4pm. It’s brutal if you are someone that likes the sun.
+1. I am a native Mainer. Live in DC now, but still summer there and will move back eventually (read: after my child goes to college) to a family home we have inherited but my spouse is not from there and we may never do 100% in Maine. Will most likely keep our DC house. It’s a big move and although I love it and have over 6 generations of family history there, it’s definitely not for everyone and that is the truth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you spent time there? I would caution you to spend some time there in the winter (and late fall, late spring:early summer. Not uncommon to have cold temps and snow in may. Also, be aware it gets dark very early in the winter. Like 4pm. It’s brutal if you are someone that likes the sun.
This. If you have only ever been to Maine between June and September, realize that that is not representative of what it is like to live there year-round. It is very very different when the summer people leave.
Also, the medical care in Maine SUCKS big time. There are simply not enough doctors in the state, and really only one tertiary care hospital (in Portland). Pen Bay is okay, and facilities in Bangor and Augusta are...okay. People who need advanced care sometimes cannot get it in Portland bc the beds are full and the waits are too long, and people go to Boston for anything elective that is next-level. For emergencies, you may be SOL and stuck with suboptimal care. I would NOT retire there.
I adore Maine and I have no issue with cold weather, but I know two different couples who sold their homes in Maine after they got older because of lack access to health care. They both still go up for a few months in the summer, but decided they can't live there anything like full time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you spent time there? I would caution you to spend some time there in the winter (and late fall, late spring:early summer. Not uncommon to have cold temps and snow in may. Also, be aware it gets dark very early in the winter. Like 4pm. It’s brutal if you are someone that likes the sun.
This. If you have only ever been to Maine between June and September, realize that that is not representative of what it is like to live there year-round. It is very very different when the summer people leave.
Also, the medical care in Maine SUCKS big time. There are simply not enough doctors in the state, and really only one tertiary care hospital (in Portland). Pen Bay is okay, and facilities in Bangor and Augusta are...okay. People who need advanced care sometimes cannot get it in Portland bc the beds are full and the waits are too long, and people go to Boston for anything elective that is next-level. For emergencies, you may be SOL and stuck with suboptimal care. I would NOT retire there.
Anonymous wrote:I lived in Maine for a dozen years before and after law school in DC - attended Orono for undergraduate and graduate degrees and lived in the Orono/Bangor area and also in coastal Hancock County.
Maine is heartbreakingly beautiful, I miss it a lot. I wish I could have found work there and lived there forever but at the same time I don’t. Yes you can find cultural experiences and some progressive people to hang with but there is still a lot of backward thinking up there and it is a hard place to be old unless you have plenty of money because social supports are abysmal for elders and other vulnerable people.
Anonymous wrote:I lived in Maine for a dozen years before and after law school in DC - attended Orono for undergraduate and graduate degrees and lived in the Orono/Bangor area and also in coastal Hancock County.
Maine is heartbreakingly beautiful, I miss it a lot. I wish I could have found work there and lived there forever but at the same time I don’t. Yes you can find cultural experiences and some progressive people to hang with but there is still a lot of backward thinking up there and it is a hard place to be old unless you have plenty of money because social supports are abysmal for elders and other vulnerable people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you spent time there? I would caution you to spend some time there in the winter (and late fall, late spring:early summer. Not uncommon to have cold temps and snow in may. Also, be aware it gets dark very early in the winter. Like 4pm. It’s brutal if you are someone that likes the sun.
+1. I am a native Mainer. Live in DC now, but still summer there and will move back eventually (read: after my child goes to college) to a family home we have inherited but my spouse is not from there and we may never do 100% in Maine. Will most likely keep our DC house. It’s a big move and although I love it and have over 6 generations of family history there, it’s definitely not for everyone and that is the truth.
Anonymous wrote:Have you spent time there? I would caution you to spend some time there in the winter (and late fall, late spring:early summer. Not uncommon to have cold temps and snow in may. Also, be aware it gets dark very early in the winter. Like 4pm. It’s brutal if you are someone that likes the sun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone been to Brunswick and can advise?
Brunswick is very nice. It's a decent-sized town with a commercial center, sidewalks everywhere, and of course Bowdoin College, where you can attend various events including the international music festival every summer. There is also a theater in the town and an excellent public library.
It is well-situated in that it's just a half-hour (or less) north of Portland, yet close to wonderful midcoast locations including Wiscasset, Harpswell, Bath, and Boothbay Harbor. Beaches are ten minutes away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone been to Brunswick and can advise?
Brunswick is very nice. It's a decent-sized town with a commercial center, sidewalks everywhere, and of course Bowdoin College, where you can attend various events including the international music festival every summer. There is also a theater in the town and an excellent public library.
It is well-situated in that it's just a half-hour (or less) north of Portland, yet close to wonderful midcoast locations including Wiscasset, Harpswell, Bath, and Boothbay Harbor. Beaches are ten minutes away.
It's okay, but I would not uproot my life to live there. Pretty views do not a life make.
Anonymous wrote:I live in Brunswick on its outskirts. Popham and Reid beaches are more like 40 mins away. Range Pond SP is also 40 mins.