At the height of the busy summer season, there are hundreds of daily visitors to the Cranberry Isles, along with hundreds more who own or rent houses to stay for their favorite vacation of the year.
We are inundated with faces we don’t know, and frazzled by trying to catch up with all of the people we do know because they are only here for a week or two. In the midst of this frenzy, islanders are often asked, “how do you get through the winter out there?”
In July and August, this is the last thing on our minds, but the questions about winter are legitimate. Lest we be caught actually voicing a snarky remark, here is an alphabet of choices for next summer’s response.
Always have a plan B. High winds can cause the ferry to be canceled resulting in islanders stranded off the island, or workers on the island, and appointments to require rescheduling.
Badminton, bread baking, keeping a bird list, and butt-walk racing!
Cadillac Water Taxi provides the first winter taxi service to the islands. It is especially great for times when you can’t catch the last Beal and Bunker ferry at 3:30 p.m. Cranberry General Store, where people congregate to catch up on the latest island news, and church services on each island.
Duck stamps and Dip of the Month Club. Rick Alley is working on a painting of harlequin ducks for this year’s duck stamp competition, and 5 members of the club will brave ocean dips for three months of water temperatures in the high 30’s.
Eat! (What else? Isn’t this universal in winter?) Eileen Richards, a friendly face at the Cranberry Post Office. Etsy.com, a commerce Web site used by some island crafters. Electricity, yes we do have it out here.
Flexibility (see A), food, friends, and Facebook.
Generators for when the power goes out. If the outage lasts for more than a day, some generous people will actually drive around with their generators in a truck to provide a few hours of power for those who don’t have them. Gratitude for a slower pace of life at this time of year.
Henry Isaacs has been plein air painting in the snow. Hilarity. So many things are just a bit funnier at this time of year. High-definition TV.
Ice is prevalent in the gravel pits for skating, on windshields for scraping, (only a handful of people between the two islands actually have a garage) and on the float at the Fisherman’s Co-op where it has to be pounded off to get to the lobsters in the crates below. Islesford School, a center of activity for kindergarten though eighth grade.
Joy Sprague, a welcoming presence at the Islesford Post Office.
King cake. A New Orleans tradition for Epiphany, recently served at a pot luck dinner on Islesford. The one who gets the baby in their piece of cake will have good fortune for the rest of the year.
Libraries. Thanks to the hard work of our librarians Ruth Westphal and Cindy Thomas, the libraries on Great Cranberry and Islesford are consistently in the top ten for per capita circulation in the state of Maine.
Meetings. Fire meetings, Selectmen’s meetings, meetings of the minds. Movies, and the time to watch them.
Netflix. Movie rentals and returns without leaving the island. The red Netflix envelopes are a daily sight at the island post offices. New recipes and time to try them.
Olympics. Many of us will be watching the Winter Games in February.
Poetry workshop with Rick Benjamin on Islesford in January. Potluck suppers. Painting lobster buoys.
Quiet.
Reading. Lots of reading.
Shrimp season. Weekly shrimp purchases are a delicious way to support a local winter industry. Snowplows. Thanks to Blair Colby and Cory Alley, our island roads are usually plowed and sanded before those on the mainland. There is never a snow day at the Islesford School. The only cancellations are caused by power outages.
Travel. Many of us have more time for it at this time of year. Islanders have been all over the world, and run into each other there!
Upstairs at the Islesford Neighborhood House. The only room that really heats well there in the winter. It is where Town Meeting will take place this year in March.
Varnishing boats at the boatyards on Great Cranberry.
Warrant for Town Meeting and the Annual Report get their final touches before going to the printer. Our award-winning town publication looks back on 2009 with photographs and reports from all town officials, and looks forward with the school and town budgets for 2010.
X-country skiing. A great way to get around the islands after a snowfall.
Yahtzee. People tend to play more games in the winter.
Zeroing in on all the things we put off until there is time in the winter to do them; including
Zzzzzzz…lots of naps!
Barb Fernald is a freelance writer and jeweler who lives on Islesford.