Our Maine Street's Aroostook Issue 4 : Spring 2010 | Page 17

The Log Cabin by Edward “Ted” Blanchard When I was in the U. S. Air Force back in 1950, I found great interest in talking with new acquaintances about our respective local customs and living conditions. There was always a cabin in my life and it seemed that whenever I started talking about this subject, it brought the response, “Does everyone in Maine have a log cabin?” My writing on this subject is a fact-based account of “woods” cabins in Northern Maine. Based on personal experience, I will attempt to relate how cabins and the tranquil, wooded areas where they were built impacted me as a young boy and even now into adulthood. From my first knowledge of a log cabin in the woods with my Dad, to the one that my son-in-law and I have today is reminiscent of times gone by, yet times still available to some of us. There are many “old ways” that have been forgotten and while I still have memories of those times and ways, I have been fortunate enough to recapture them with a present-day, remote cabin that still bears a resemblance to those simpler times. The pack basket on my father’s back held a live, unsteady cargo...Me. I was three years old, too young and short legged to walk through uneven woods trails Dad spent many years of his life in the Maine woods. In his twenties, he left “civilization” to spend the harsh winter alone in a trapper’s cabin while he made a living trapping numerous fur-bearing animals. In the spring he returned to town with his load of furs and untrimmed red beard. Dad lived and worked in the woods until he was in his early 30’s when he married and settled down to a job in a lumber mill. The aforementioned pack basket with me in it was my introduction to the woods. I grew up loving the Maine wilderness and all that it offered. Fishing, hunting, trapping and just enjoying the peaceful trails and roads and especially the Camp. There was always a cabin in the family. Dad and three of his friends built a log cabin when I was very young. It was three miles from a highway. We always walked to it as there were no ATV’s back in the 1930’s. The cabin was only a few hundred yards from a brook teeming with trout. I spent many happy, memorable hours at that log cabin with Dad and friends. Unfortunately, the cabin burned to the ground one fall. It was not certain how the fire started. Dad was not adverse to ignoring the laws of the day. Sunday hunting was and is illegal in Maine. Also, there are seasons for hunting various species. One particular day we were coming out of the woods from Dad’s camp and noted a partridge sunning itself on the trunk of a fallen tree. It just happened to be closed season for hunting birds. Dad always carried a .22 Woodsman pistol and was an exceptionally good shot. Memory does not serve as to whether or not he hit the bird, but he did take aim and shoot at it. Just before we left the trail and got to the waiting car, a Game Warden stopped us for a license check. After the formalities of this he asked if we had seen any birds (partridge). Dad answered in the affirmative and I thought to help out by saying that Dad took a shot at it. I have no idea why the warden did not pursue the subject! For a few years I had no cabin to go to for a night or day stay. This did not stop my hunting, fishing or tenting out although of course, the camp itself offers its own unique experience. Between cabins, while in high school, my friends and I spent many hours in two cabins. One belonged to a friend of Dad’s which was on the old road (really on a foot trail) that lead to Dad’s original camp that had burned. We would load our pack baskets with food then hitch hike, bike or walk the twelve miles of highway followed by a one and a half mile hike through the woods to the camp. This was back in the 1940’s and the old cabin had seen better days. It measured only about twelve by fourteen feet in size. The roof was low and one had to duck when entering the door. Purlins (logs placed lengthwise in the roof to which the roof was attached) were about the only thing holding the roof together. The roof was made of hand-made wooden shingles called cedar splits. The bottom logs were resting on the ground and over the years were rotting their way to be part of the earth from which they had originally sprouted and grown. There were three small windows, one in each end and one on a long wall. Two double bunks took up much of the available floor space. A small table and even smaller cook stove consisted of the furniture. We especially enjoyed the camp in the fall when winged pests were hiding under the bark of the logs getting ready for winter. All of us carried rifles but no one ever shot a deer from our trips at that cabin. In fact, I don’t recall ever seeing a deer. Probably because we were too noisy as a bunch of fun-loving, teenagers were bound to be. We spent hours on the beech ridge gathering beech nuts. The amount of food we consumed was unbelievable; but then, teenage boys burn lots of calories! A nice spring about fifty yards from the cabin supplied us with sweet, clear, cold water. It bubbled up from the forest floor and soon got lost as silently as it arrived. It was at this site that one of my friends and I introduced t ݼ