Who invited Lee?

Living in the path of a hurricane, even as far north as the Maine coast, made for some tense past few days.

From midweek on, we watched with mounting dread as the weather forecasts showed Hurricane Lee’s projected pathway congealing in a route that would bring the eye of the storm directly over Eastport rather than curving away from landfall. Expected sustained wind levels rose from 25 to 35 miles an hour, which litter the town with roof shingles in a typical nor’easter, to a stressful 50 and then, ugh, 70 with gusts even higher.

A day of 70 likely would have ripped much of our roofing away – we’re actually moving ahead with replacing that in a remodeling in a few weeks, now that we have a contractor lined up.

Projected rainfall also kept rising, from the 4½ inches with the slower winds.

The other concern was a power outage, a common problem here. The question was how long. Would everything in the freezer be lost? My wife even planned for three days of cold meals. Smart woman.

Friday was gorgeous, without an inkling of what was ahead. We had a flurry of securing anything outside that might take flight in the wind, including the charcoal grill and the outdoor chairs. Removed the plastic covering over the woodpile. Wrapped the mattresses, books, and fabrics upstairs in black plastic, should the roof start leaking. We were especially worried about a patch over a former chimney that was removed when we bought this place three years.

Then we gleaned all the nearly ripe tomatoes, peppers, and cucumbers from the garden, assuming that high winds would break the vines. A tall tree on one neighbor’s side of the property line has been a worry – the top is quite exposed and includes a widow-maker branch that’s been dangling ominously the entire time we’ve been here, despite other large branches that have come down.

We parked our cars along the street rather than closer, just in case.

An additional concern was the possibility of ocean surge at high tide, flooding the causeway that’s our only route on or off the island.

Yes, as our acting city manager reminded the world, Eastport’s an island city in the bay.

We did think of earlier times when these things struck without warning, sometimes wiping out entire fishing fleets and their crews, and leaving villages of widows and orphans in their wake.

Quite simply, we remembered to be grateful the kind of forecasting we too easily take for granted.

At this point in the cycle, though, there wasn’t much more we could really do. Even fleeing would be difficult. So we’d hunker down and hope for the best.

~*~

Friday afternoon’s newest forecasts did hold a hint of relief. After drastically rising in the previous 24 hours, in what should have been growing accuracy, the winds and rains were actually being scaled back, though not universally, as the projected path was revised further east. Still, we were warned that this was a very broad storm – the size of Montana, as we heard.

~*~

The air had clouded by late afternoon, and, as I washed dishes, I saw a police car parked in the driveway of an elderly, reclusive, and very hard-of-hearing woman on that side of our house. We assumed it was a welfare check, she rarely answered the door, and the young officer was obviously very perplexed – and determined – in conducting his mission. He tried all the doors, returned to the car to make calls, and then tried the doors and peering through windows again.

I went about some other tasks before returning to the window to see the police car still there and then, through the apple trees, a hand in blue latex that connected to another man, or at least a black suit. Then I saw a second black suit guiding the rolling table and wrapped bundle toward the back of their black SUV.

This wasn’t entirely unexpected, but the timing on the verge of the storm remains uncanny.

~*~

Saturday dawned with heavy rains and winds, but still manageable. We had our early steaming coffee, checked the forecast and saw that Lee was now expected to land over neighboring Nova Scotia rather than our end of Maine and then travel up the far coast of Fundy Bay rather than our side. But as I was about to pull two slices of bread into the toaster, the kitchen power kicked out. We assumed it was the toaster overloading the circuit again but then heard the growling chorus of generators around the neighborhood kick in.

No, the power was out, much earlier than we expected. It was only 7:15 and we were far from the worst conditions ahead.

The ground was saturated, meaning trees were more likely to be uprooted, but this was still unnerving. The longer hours without a working sump pump or the freezer functioning were the prime concerns.

We did get a cell phone text saying that the winds and rain were keeping the utility crews from using their bucket trucks. Oh, joy. That on top of an earlier one saying they didn’t expect power to be restored until Tuesday. We hoped they’d do better, since the entire city was down.

We hunkered down into Plan B, which included a lot of reading, even a little journaling on my part. If I really got bored, I could start packing for my travel the next weekend. My wife was probably relieved there wouldn’t be the usual Saturday afternoon opera broadcast. We would live.

But it was a very dark, gloomy, day.

The inability to be online or use our laptops left us squirrelly. I wasn’t surprised. But without power, our desktop weather screen was blank, leaving us ignorant of the latest wind or rain levels on our deck.

Fortunately, the temperature was still in the low 60s, so we weren’t freezing. Still, it would have been nice to have that woodburning stove we’ve finally ordered, along with the new insulated metal chimney to be installed in a few weeks. Here, we thought we were making progress. And I do find watching the flames mesmerizing.

If it were only the Internet being out, we might still watch a DVD together, but scratch that.

At least we enjoyed cold but braised pork chops and cold mashed potatoes for an early dinner.

Outside, the driving rain outside flew horizontally, and from the upstairs windows I viewed the channel between us and Campobello Island was whitecaps racing southward. The island really does shelter us from the heavy surf elsewhere. One gull that foolishly rose up to fly was sent spinning sideways.

Periodically, the rain or perhaps fog obliterated any sight of the Canadian island or the channel itself, a situation that continued through much of the day.

The stop sign on our street corner was fluttering wildly, as it’s prone to do in heavy wind. The big tree was bending heavily, but in that neighbor’s direction.

By midafternoon, when I was dreading the worst, however, things let up. There were actually a few people walking along the street, something that would have been impossible in the heavier winds. A few cars passed, too, though the question of where they were headed remained a mystery.

Was this the calm eye of the storm? A false lull? Even more surprising, we got a postal delivery, earlier than usual, at that, and the rain let up entirely, at least briefly.

Around dusk, the light in our HP printer flickered on, a harbinger of power restoration, even before the other lights came on. Could it be? Only 6:15?

Nothing in the freezer had thawed. We had four to six inches of water in the cellar, but that would be going down rather than rising, as long as the power held. I stepped outside and saw that the roofing, including the patch, had held. The top of the tree was still in place, though there were some big limbs in the said neighbor’s yard.

We were back to a mostly normal Saturday night at home.

~*~

Sunday arrived as sunny, cloudless blue, perfectly comfortable.

The ground was littered in fallen apples, wet leaves, and twigs everywhere. The apples, I’m told, will soon ferment, scenting the air and luring deer and birds that, no kidding, delight in being intoxicated. We’ll see.

We did learn that what had hit us was a post-tropical cyclone, now that Lee had been downgraded. A gust of 83 mph was recorded at a weather station just six miles from us. That blast had come unimpeded straight down Passamaquoddy Bay.

The eye of the storm had passed 50 miles to our east, making a huge difference in the impact, even though we were still in the thick of the action.

We did realize the listing of the peak number of customers without power was misleading. They should be called “accounts,” as in households and businesses, rather than customers. Think of three people or more in a median household. In sprawling Washington, population 30,000 or so, for one utility to say that 10,000 customers were affected really means that the entire area, about the size of Rhode Island and Delaware combined, was cut off. The county’s biggest city and some towns to the north were also out but part of an electric coop reporting separately.

We do sympathize with our neighbors in Nova Scotia to our east. We’re separated by Fundy Bay, about 80 miles wide here, but share a kinship. The province has been heavily hit by drought and forest fires this year, as well as last year’s Hurricane Fiona.

The intersection at the other side of our block is obstructed by this fallen branch.
This view gives you a sense of how precarious it hangs from utility lines running along both streets.

If you missed my latest Zoom presentation

You can catch up with my insights on “Quaker Meeting as a nest for social justness” via YouTube, thanks to West Falmouth Friends on Cape Cod.

The event, the latest of the special presentations based on my book, Quaking Dover and the New Hampshire city’s 400th anniversary, was recorded and is now available.

Many thanks to all involved.

To see what transpired during the hour, click here.

This free opportunity might look crazy, really

Offering the ebook edition of my new book, Quaking Dover, for free might look crazy, but let me put it into perspective.

Books get lost in the outpouring of new publications these days. Yet for publicity, nothing beats word of mouth, especially when it comes to getting folks to pick up their own copy.

In the old days, I would have sent my paper editions to potential reviewers, but there was no guarantee that would lead to any results. I know, having picked up many free books as a newspaper editor that way, as well as my experience with my first novel, Subway Hitchhikers.

So let’s cut to the chase. Smashwords.com has an annual promotional sale this month, and I’m participating by offering my latest book for free, hoping that if you like it, you’ll give it a brief review on my page there along with five stars. Maybe you’ll even want to give paperbook copies as gifts as a result. Either way, I get a much-needed boost. We’re back to word-of-mouth.

But first you have to download it. Just go to Smashwords and follow through.

Honestly, it might even leave you prepared to order more of my ebooks once you’re comfortable with the process.

Is it a deal?

As a professional historian friend said after one of my presentations

New England history is all through Harvard. And then Yale and Williams College.

Except, of course, a few mavericks like me. (Even though, humbly confessed, I’m not a historian.)

Well, you do have another opportunity to see why he said that if you register promptly for my free Zoom presentation from Cape Cod at 12:30 Sunday afternoon ( https://bit.ly/QuakingDover ).

Here’s hoping to hear from you there!

This feels like a ‘welcome to the club’

Coming up at the Phoenix wine bar downtown on Thursday from 6-8 pm, I’ll be one of six local writers reading from our books.

It’s organized by Catherine SJ Lee, whose wonderful collection of short stories Island Secrets is well worth acquiring. One secret she doesn’t mention is how many fine writers and other artists dwell on the charming island I now call home. Honestly, I feel honored to be among those invited to read and am certainly looking forward to personally meeting others.

Each of us will present a 15-minute selection of our work and then engage in a meet-and-greet over a bookselling and signing at the end.

These days, presenting my case without including an accompanying PowerPoint does feel a bit strange. Still, as a writer, I do love having the text itself be the sole focus, as I have enjoyed in our monthly open mics at the arts center.

The wine bar event is part of the first ArtWalk weekend of the season in Eastport and Lubec. Other planned activities include gallery tours, rock painting, sidewalk chalking, games, musicians around town, an outdoor contradance, and perhaps a street dance or two.

Well, it has been called ‘a rich feast of a book’

Join me via Zoom at 6 pm Tuesday when I look at Dover Friends’ influence in Maine – along with other surprises. We’ll start with sections of my book Quaking Dover and move on from there. (May I admit that preparing these PowerPoint presentations turns into a lot of fun?)

Preregistration for the Pembroke (Maine) Historical Society’s free event in its wonderful ongoing series is required. Hope you’ll be there.

There’s much more than one big story to touch on

There’s more to the origin of Dover Friends Meeting than the three women who were whipped out of town in December 1662 in what would have been a death sentence, had it been carried out to the letter.

Still, it’s a big story, one that occupies a central place in my new book, Quaking Dover. The horrific incident is also the most frequently visited page at the public library’s online history site, and it’s the subject of one of Greenleaf Whittier’s most famous poems.

I’ll be using that to introduce other examples of courage and faith from the town’s Quaker experience when the Dover Public Library features me in a book reading in front of a live audience this coming Wednesday. I hope you can join me, perhaps even posing a question or insight.

The appearance will also be streamed live, but preregistration is required.

That’s 6:30 pm this Wednesday (March 22).

If it’s anything like the Dover400 new authors presentation earlier in the month, I can assure you it will be a blast.

 

I’m having fun preparing PowerPoint presentations

In general, when it comes to new tech, I’m pretty much of a neo-Luddite. I prefer to stick to the tried-and-true rather than chasing after every new twist and trying to master it before it’s obsolete by the next wave.

I still haven’t stepped up to host a Zoom session, for heaven’s sake. And we’re definitely not E-Zpass users when it comes to highway tolls, either.

Preparing visuals to accompany my public presentations related to my new book, Quaking Dover, however, has me beaming.

The first leap was in learning to connect a laptop to a slide projector – you know, so folks could watch a slide show on a big white screen or a wall.

From that experience, I realized the shots really needed to be all of one size. Some pictures I was discussing ran off the screen, while others were too small. That led to the PowerPoint format.

My initial outing with PowerPoint was with the Whittier Birthplace Museum’s virtual lecture series back in January. There, I was amazed to discover how much I could enlarge a detail from a photo without having it pixilate. Individual signatures from a Quaker marriage document, for instance, could be displayed prominently. The size of the photo in hand wasn’t an issue, either. Up we go!

I’ve been at it again, this time for presentations at the Dover Public Library on March 22 and the Pembroke (Maine) Historical Society on April 18, as well as a third in July via the Falmouth Friends Meeting on Cape Cod. All will be streamed, by the way, if you’re interested in participating. (Do mark your calendars.)

It’s getting easier with each round, and I’m learning how to easily copy a PP slide from one production to another. Yay!

Fun? I’m finding it downright exciting. Hope you do, too.

It’s always a fun time

For those of you living in New Hampshire or southern Maine, here’s an invitation to Dover Friends’ annual Arts & Letters event now rescheduled for 2 pm Saturday, March 18.

It’s one way to sample the local Quaker community as members of all ages display their artistic talents, from painting, drawing, weaving, and photography to original music, poetry, and fiction, perhaps even dance or furniture-making.

The mix each year is different. I remember our amazement when we first saw the museum-quality quilts a newly retired English teacher had begun creating as well as the array of Sculpey figures one of the kids produced. The afternoon even includes a potluck, billed as culinary arts.

The historic meetinghouse is at 141 Central Avenue, just south of the downtown.

Cheers!