Monday, November 6, 2017

Where Were You When the Lights Went Out?


Doris Day in her penultimate film (1968 MGM) 
The first big blackout in the northeast that I can remember occurred on November 9, 1965. It was a Tuesday. I was thrilled because school had been cancelled, but as a fourth grader I also felt the spookiness of an extended Halloween. On that historic day, when 25 million people in seven states across 80,000 square miles were left without power, my dad was working in Brooklyn, New York, and a part of my soul was old enough to realize that no lights in New York City could be dangerous. The good news of the 1965 blackout was that it occurred before that dark summer of 1977 when the serial killer Son of Sam terrified the city, and the lights went out again. The happy days of the 1950’s were still lingering on our minds in '65, and I don’t remember any looting on that November day, but that would come later on July 13, 1977. In ’65, lots of people were stuck on subway trains, and on elevators. And children were deprived of their favorite TV shows, like Batman, Bonanza, I Dream of Jeannie, and Bewitched (I’m still trying to wiggle my nose like Samantha Stevens, a.k.a. Elizabeth Montgomery), but I don’t remember violent behavior unless you count the curse words. We were in the middle of a crisis, but there was a silver lining. All those millions of people who were left without power were forced to talk to each other wherever they happened to be: at the bus stop, the office, the store, the hospital, the station, or at home. Conversation was the only game in town! Suddenly, when the power went out, people started paying attention to other people, and their observations inspired art! Three years later a major motion picture, Where Were You When the Lights Went Out?, starring Doris Day, was released. The theme song was an instant hit, and I found myself humming that tune a lot last week when the lights went out all over Maine.

On Monday, October 30, 2017, in the wee small hours of the morning, a wicked wind storm that some meteorologist would call a “bomb cycle” blew down trees up and down the coast of New England causing half a million Mainers to lose their power. But I wasn’t at home in Bath. I was in Connecticut with my granddaughter, who had been practicing how to say “Boo” for a week so she could be a friendly ghost and go trick-or-treating. Even though she is only twenty-months old, I was hoping she would remember this Halloween, and I wanted to be with her. And then at three o’clock in the morning, I heard a fierce wind. When I went downstairs to comfort my dog, I spied a gigantic tree sprawled across the yard next to my car. (That’s better than on the car!) Since there was nothing I could do to help the tree, Penny and I went back upstairs. At sunrise, the texts from friends and neighbors started arriving. The lights had gone out in Bath. Our house was still standing, but a huge tree behind our neighbor's house had fallen and had flattened their fence and deck. Looking for the bright side, our neighbor texted that their view of the Kennebec had improved. At that moment I began to feel guilty because I should have been in Bath helping my neighbors; instead, I was enjoying a pumpkin muffin with Stella.

A Connecticut fife and drum corps on Halloween
There were lots of school closings in Connecticut, but my son’s neighborhood still had power. I kept checking the CMP Website and Facebook for news about Maine. And the news was grim. My friends in Bath told me to stay put and enjoy the holiday with lights, but I do guilt better than any other feeling! Of course, my granddaughter knew how to distract me. She insisted on going to the Halloween parade in a nearby town. We followed a local fife and drum corps down Main Street and marveled at the costumes and lights. Now I was feeling more like a wimp than a Mainer! After collecting candy and drinking apple cider, I returned to Stella’s house and texted my neighbors that I would be returning to Bath on Wednesday, power or not, and hoped they could charge their phones!

One of the many trees that fell in Maine!
On our five-hour drive home, I checked my phone for messages whenever I was in the co-pilot seat. Facebook was filled with good reports about people helping people. While everyone may not be a fan of Facebook, social media can be a lifesaver in times of trouble! Posts on Living in Bath, and posts by the staff of Coastal Journal shed light on a difficult situation. Their posts were clear and helpful at a time when most Mainers were looking for information. And many posts by Facebook friends were simply uplifting, and some of them were even funny. Laughter really is a powerful tool against despair!

In the spirit of Thanksgiving, let me share some observations about how Bath behaved when the lights went out:

1. The Bath Area Y and the Landing Y opened their facilities to everyone for hot showers and charging stations.
2. People with generators opened their homes to neighbors as a warming place.
3. Friends recommended good generators to buy for the future.
4. Charlene, the owner of Run with Soup, donated a vat of hot, black bean soup to Bath Housing to offer their residents.
Arctic Fox photo by John Pertel

5. A lucky Bathite, John Pertel, out of town on business when the lights went out, posted amazing photographs of an arctic fox in Manitoba, Canada, and described how a polar bear threatened his company’s substation, which is working to bring abundant hydropower (electricity!) to the states. It was an entertaining post!
6. Friends spread the word that battery operated head lamps come in handy during a power outage.
7. Reporters posted photos of all the power trucks from Indiana and New York that had arrived to help.
8. A fleet of Halloween orange, Asplundh tree service trucks also came to help. 

9. Brackett’s kept their shelves stocked, their lights on, and their parking lot available for all those trucks!
10. Local fire houses and town halls offered their hot showers to residents without power.
11. Local stores, restaurants and coffee shops with power on Front Street offered hot beverages, charging stations, and a place to sit.
12. On Thursday morning, my friend, Joanne, texted me that she was really having fun cooking all that moose meat that had defrosted over the last four days! And I laughed out loud!  
13. The Bath P.D. moved trick-or-treating to Friday night, and lots of kids and parents came out with awesome costumes (I especially liked the little mummy – all that toilet paper!)

I am deliberately choosing to end my list with item number 13 because I don’t believe it’s an unlucky number. How one survives a setback or a crisis has nothing to do with luck; it has everything to do with your outlook. On July 13, 1977, during a summer heatwave, the lights went out in New York City at dusk after most business owners had gone home. Before power was restored, thirty-five blocks of Broadway were destroyed because of arson and looting, fifty new Pontiacs were stolen from a car dealership in the Bronx, over 500 policemen were injured, and a few soon-to-be-famous street rappers broke into electronic stores and stole equipment that helped them launch their careers. It was the summer of the Son of Sam killings, and New York was in the throws of an economic downturn. It was the worst of times! Under darkness, angry people expressed their rage. I was twenty years old, and I decided to be hopeful, and that has made all the difference. When the lights went out in Bath, my friends and neighbors reminded me how we make our luck. When the lights go out, just wait, they’ll come on again. Yes, they will.

As fate and Bath would have it, my husband and I arrived home at 6:40 p.m. on Wednesday.  Later, our neighbors told us that power had been restored on Washington Street at 6:30 that evening. We had officially missed the blackout of 2017 by ten minutes!




Friday, September 29, 2017

Turning Wheels on Front and Centre


Ornament, one of the prettiest shops in Bath, will be closing on October 7th, and I miss it already. This uptown store at 70 Front Street inspired me to decorate my home and garden with new and vintage treasures, like a wooden trellis, a wicker chair, an iron bed, wax candles shaped like pears, and other necessities. When I first arrived in Bath, I needed a lot of home goods, but truth be told I often shopped at Ornament because I enjoyed chatting with its owner, Gayle Stodder Hunt. A genuine Mainer, Gayle is a Morse graduate, and a smart business woman with exceptionally good taste. Over the past four years, she has helped Joe and I transform our antique colonial into our everyday home. For example, our flat screen TV sits on a vintage bench that we purchased at Ornament. And when I sit down to watch my favorite program (Outlander), I usually curl up under the coral blanket that matches my coral mermaid chair, which were both purchased at Ornament. If you’re a practical person, you might wonder why I don’t shop on-line. Well, clearly, I'm not practical. I own a mermaid chair!


The Mermaid Chair

I prefer shopping locally. It’s more fun, more social, more tactile, more visual, and more informative. I learn when I shop. I seek out the best shopkeepers I can find, and I ask them lots of questions. And more often than not, they know the answer because it’s their business. Ornament has been open for ten years, and that’s a success story. Next Saturday, Gayle will turn off the lights, and lock her signature blue door for the last time because she is ready for something new, a little more time with family and friends. Her readiness to close reminds us how difficult it is to run a retail business.


Seventy Front Street is not the only retail space in our City of Ships that will be leased by someone new. City Drawers, a boutique that boasts two locations in Maine, will be closing its doors at 96 Front Street as well. This popular lingerie boutique opened its first store in Belfast in 2011 and opened its Bath location in 2015. While this essential shop has been embraced by Bath women looking for a good fit, its owner lives closer to Bangor than Bath and decided to shorten her commute by opening a store on Bangor's Main Street. For local shoppers, this was crushing news until we learned that the manager, Bette Spettel, is opening up a new boutique called Over the Moon at the same location. (Translation: The window at 96 Front Street will continue to please, amuse or agitate all those who pass by.)





A vintage treasure from downtown Bath
Solo Bistro’s cool Friday night jazz and distinct Nordic flavor has already sailed into the past, but a trendy new brewery will be opening soon in the historic Morris Povich building at 143 Front Street. As recently as three years ago, this address was home to Brick Store Antiques where Joe and I purchased the first item for our covered deck, three iron stacking tables with marble tops. That purchase marked our first discovery of buried treasure in Bath. (The marble tops were piled in a box and the tables were in need of a good scraping and some white paint!) As fate and Bath would have it, the owner of that glorious antique shop, Polly Thibodeau, is now a friend. And I believe Polly would agree that change is bound to happen, wheels are supposed to turn, and forward is the right direction to go!

Outfit from Pitter Patter; baby is heaven sent  

Even though I’m an optimist, and I trust that change will bring new opportunities to deserving people, it’s always good to see familiar faces on Front Street, like Pitter Patter, which moved from the east side of the street to the west side a few years ago and remains a favorite place to find the perfect gift for a little baby or a young child. Colleen Whitaker, the current owner, worked at the shop for several years before buying it from her boss. Over the last ten years, she has added her own sense of style to a gentle little store for adults who have children in their life and want to buy things for them! Of course, I’m guilty of indulging in that sweet pleasure. I have purchased more than a few adorable outfits with irresistible booties and cuddly toys, like monkeys and giraffes! What better way to spend money!


Springer's Jewelers
He went to Springer's!
Money may not go quite as far on Front and Centre, but it certainly goes nicely! Consider the quality and variety of the many stores we have to choose from in downtown Bath: Springer's, Lisa-Marie's Made in Maine, the Mustard Seed, Reny's, Wags and Whiskers, Now Your Cooking, and House of Logan to name a few.





Treats at the Bath Sweet Shoppe
Our main streets truly have something for everyone. The Bath Sweet Shoppe at 19 Centre Street even sells penny candy! Last year, Karen Townsend bought this old-fashioned candy store from Joan and Sarah Fraser. In 2004, Joan and her husband, Paul, came from New Hampshire to buy a business and fulfill a lifetime dream.  Through a city-wide survey, Main Street Bath had just uncovered the desire for a candy shop in town. Serendipitously, two wishes came true! After Paul’s death, Joan and her daughter, Sarah, kept the business running until Karen found her way to Bath from California by way of Massachusetts. For Joan and Karen, the transition was seamless. Today, the Bath Sweet Shoppe continues to offer specialty chocolate in all shapes and sizes (Imagine chocolate lobsters tied with a pretty bow) as well as jelly belly’s, gummies, smarties, gourmet popcorn, tasty chips, and more! This sweet next-door neighbor of the Centre Street Gallery is a throw back to Shirley Temple’s classic song in her 1934 film Bright Eyes: “On the good ship lollipop, it’s a sweet ship to the candy shop where bon-bons play on the sunny beach of Peppermint Bay.” I like to think Peppermint Bay looks a lot like Popham Beach! Whether you have one dollar or twenty in your pocket, you can always find something to sing about at the Bath Sweet Shoppe. 


Recently, Main Street Bath conducted another survey asking Bath residents what they would like to see added to our downtown. That same question came up during their March fund-raising event, Family Feud. The three most popular answers were a movie theater, a bowling alley, and an Italian restaurant. What will the results of the newest on-line survey reveal? Whatever the responses tell us, I’m confident that Main Street Bath will continue to reinvent Front and Centre. Here in Bath, it still feels like summer, but I know autumn breezes are about to blow, and I hope they blow some new businesses onto Front and Centre Streets as some of our favorites are bound to leave us. When those newbies arrive, I will support them, and I hope you do, too. When it comes to shopping, on-line is convenient, but local is community. If Main Streets across America disappear, we may all be forced to shop on-line, and that won’t be nearly as much fun as shopping on Front and Centre. The wheels are turning, but let's pause and applaud our award-winning downtown!
 Front Street at Christmas time - photo by Mike Taylor