blainemoore

blainemoore t1_je5246i wrote

Hope you get an option for fiber soon; I switched last year and cut more than a third of my bill despite almost doubling download speed and going from 4mb/s to about 900mb/s upload. (I need a good connection for work as I run my business out of my house and was on the "best" offer from the cable company before switching.)

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blainemoore t1_je31qfr wrote

I used to live in Portland; other than the back cove series I don't get there too often anymore.

My recommendations:

  • Join the TMR email list, every Wednesday am email goes out with anything trail related for the next week (runs, races, challenges, etc.) There's a Facebook group as well, but the email has more regular info about upcoming runs.
  • Join the MTC Facebook group. There's an email list too, but more ad hoc runs are organized through Facebook and it's a good spot to ask.
  • Sign up for back cove... Not that I'm biased about that one... :)

I've heard good things about the pub runs if that is your thing, but they started after I left town and I haven't joined them.

Fleet Feet on marginal way is also a great resource; they have a paid run club and training programs for specific races that's another great resource for meeting people regularly. I used to help coach their program back when it was still Maine Running Company (stopped coaching almost a decade ago) but I'm still in touch with them regularly through the back cove series.

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blainemoore t1_je2kcnw wrote

There are a lot, depending where you live.

If you are midcoast to southern Maine, the Maine Track Club has regular runs and is the largest club in the state.

If you are fast, Dirigo has weekly runs. You do need to run fast enough to meet standards to join.

If you enjoy trails, Trail Monster Running usually has at least two group runs a week. Anybody is welcome to join TMR runs even if they aren't a member. Runs vary in location.

From the end of May through the end of August, the Weekly Back Cove 5k Series in Portland is every Wednesday night at 6pm. You pay once whether you run one race or all 14 (so keep your bib) and it's a good size crowd without being so huge you get lost, 150-250/wk. (Disclaimer: I'm one of the race directors for the series.)

Those are the groups in most involved with. There are others, you can search the rrca.org website for other clubs in the state, especially if you aren't in the Portland area. Crow Athletics, Thick Quad Squad, Eden Athletics, I know Portland has a regular Pub Run group, and I think Bangor might too?

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blainemoore t1_j6p1h9g wrote

The town has been trying to figure out how to fix this for years. There are regular public meetings discussing proposed changes, have you attended any of them? They have also done some tests to change the intersection, especially at Stanwood/Mill, to various levels of success.

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blainemoore t1_j5jle59 wrote

Heat pumps are really efficient. A wood stove is probably more efficient than oil. We switched a couple years ago from oil to natural gas, and supplement with a wood stove.

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blainemoore t1_j3s5n36 wrote

When I first moved to Maine at 21, I met some folks through bars and the like, but most of my leading friendships from that time came from my main hobby. I joined a couple of running clubs, and most of the people were at least a decade older than me at the time, but I started to meet their kids and acquaintances, and the clubs I was in at that time have plenty of younger folk now than they did then pretty much across the board.

For organized clubs, the Maine Track Club is pretty large and had folks all over the state. Trail Monster Running is smaller but is very inclusive to anyone wanting to join us even if they never become a member. I know there is a pub run group in Portland that meets regularly but they didn't exist when I lived down there so don't have a lot of details. In the summer, there's a weekly 5k every Wednesday night around the Back Cove that provides a good opportunity to socialize.

I imagine there are similar opportunities for other hobbies than running with young folk. Some of the book clubs I attend have younger folk, though most of the town governance or other volunteer stuff I do lately skews towards an older demographic.

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blainemoore t1_j2a0kel wrote

Reply to comment by cwgame in Kind barbershop by CuriousPlankton7739

I haven't been to that one, but Rossignol's across town on Maine Street is great too. Shelby charges kid cuts at $1 for each year of their age; my 7 year old always gets excited when we tell him we have an appointment. (She has a fish tank, and often brings one or both of her dogs.)

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blainemoore t1_itbscxt wrote

Pineland Farms in New Gloucester has some nice trails; mix of fields and woods, not a ton of roots or technical trails.

Twin Brooks Recreation Center in Cumberland does too, though not as many trails as Pineland.

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