Pickleball pals bring their “A” game to Wiscasset
Weather-wise, the summer was a bust for Mainers. June and July brought too much rain. August had us turning on air conditioners. September offered moderate temps but each day seemed more grey than the last. Dull. Dull. Dull. Only pickleball could distract us.
In June, the Wiscasset Recreation department announced it would offer pickleball classes. Several dozen people, beginners and experienced players showed up and have been playing several times a week.
I know ...Not another pickleball story! :( About how much fun it is; how men and women play it together, how there’s more laughing than muttering at missed shots.
Pickleball is an easy game to play. And the internet has several channels, filled with instructions and tournaments.
Yes, Donna and I have been playing pickleball with Mainers. People who live here year-round. People who have been stacking firewood for a month. People who do corny things like pick apples from their 25-year-old trees, slice and mash them into apple juice. Real, tart and tangy.
And so it is that we were at an apple cider. party. After few months, a few dozen people who live in the same area, but didn’t know each other, have become friends. This Sunday Cider Crush was at least the fourth social gathering of people who, a few months ago, were neighbors but didn’t know
each other.
When Sandy a few days ago said she was having a juice-making party, how could we say no? Juicing is kind of a cultural thing here in Maine. And it’s Sandy and Ron have been making juice all week. We were part of their fourth party this week. Sandy loves to have parties, Ron not so much.
In Maine style, these folks take it seriously. That big windy storm from last week helped. It knocked hundreds of apples off branches. The women-folk peeled and sliced apples. John and who dumped the apples into a big grinder thing that turned the fruit into mash. Then men-folk filtered buckets of the mash to produce gallon jugs of fresh apple cider.
About this blog:
Man about Wiscasset
Frank Barnako is a seasonal resident of Wiscasset at Clarks Point on the Sheepscot River. His career in journalism included on air and news director positions with CBS and NBC Radio and TV stations. He was a pioneer in the Internet, helping to create and co-found MarketWatch.com where he also developed a 200-station radio network and wrote daily columns focused on the stock market, business news, and technology. Barnako describes himself as “an aspiring photographer,” whose work can be seen at frankbarnako.com<http://frankbarnako.com>. He is a member of the town’s Investment Advisory Committee. Email him at wiscasset@barnako.com.