hehe - sorry. I tried posting a comment here on another thread and got an error. In the course of figuring out why the error occurred, I needed to leave several "test" comments. Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.
This, unfortunately, is something that happens somewhere in the northeast every winter. My understanding is that usually they end up having to tear the house down and physically remove the oil-soaked earth beneath the house, truck in new fill and start over again. Fortunately, oil companies carry insurance for these sorts of things.
Somehow I missed your last question. I think perhaps that your comment got stuck in the moderation queue.
So, yes - the memories of the place are wonderful. I think the first time I went I was in fifth grade. The sound of ocean, the salt air, the foghorn are all burned into my mind. I love it up there.
Some other memories:
The green shimmering curtain of the northern lights. Views of the Milky Way galaxy unpolluted by light. With the lack of light pollution, one can even see satellites orbiting at times.
Another amazing thing was the incredible shortwave radio reception we can get there at night - so many channels from so many places that barely touching the dial would produce lock into another transmission. We'd sit be the campfire at night and listen to Radio Moscow and the BBC and Voice of America and dozens of other wonderful cultural transmissions. I've never been able to get shortwave radio reception as good as that anywhere else.
As far as my impression of the size of the island goes, having married a foreigner in 1991 my vacation time throughout the 90s was mostly spent in my wife's country (Thailand). Because of that I personally didn't visit the island for appx. 10 years. Upon returning after that hiatus, I was actually surprised to find it BIGGER than I had remembered it. Its size is something the photographs don't give justice to. The fact that it has more than a mile of ocean frontage might hint at its size. It is big enough that even with 9 of us camping, it's possible for everybody to be off on their own doing something, out of view of everybody else.
Happy times!
I wish I could afford to buy it from my folks, but alas, my fortunes disappeared along with the dotcom bubble. Those sure were the days, huh? hehe
We always hauled water. We've been told that the island is a good candidate for having a well drilled for fresh water.
There is a spot - it's actually at the rear-left of the photo above, the dark cliff below to the left of the tents - where freshwater trickles down the cliff. I think that freshwater is spring-fed.
The funny thing is that there are several "Ram Islands" in Maine. Ours is the northernmost and, (I think), the largest.
It was named "Ram Island" because sheep were kept there. When my folks bought it in 1970 there were a number of sheep on the island along with a wooden building for them to take shelter in. The building was there throughout my youth into young adulthood (I am 37 now) but it collapsed sometime in the early 1990s and has since melted into the ground without a trace.
There is at least one sheep (ram?) on the island at the moment. There are a few photos here:
Some other favorites of mine:
* SuperGreg
* Ill Mitch
* KC LMNOP
* Thirstin Howl III
* Bushwick Bill's new name:
"Dr. Wolfgang Von Bushwickin the Barbarian Mother Funky Stay High Dollar Billstir"
Now THAT'S a rapper name.
Somehow I missed your last question. I think perhaps that your comment got stuck in the moderation queue.
So, yes - the memories of the place are wonderful. I think the first time I went I was in fifth grade. The sound of ocean, the salt air, the foghorn are all burned into my mind. I love it up there.
Some other memories:
The green shimmering curtain of the northern lights. Views of the Milky Way galaxy unpolluted by light. With the lack of light pollution, one can even see satellites orbiting at times.
Another amazing thing was the incredible shortwave radio reception we can get there at night - so many channels from so many places that barely touching the dial would produce lock into another transmission. We'd sit be the campfire at night and listen to Radio Moscow and the BBC and Voice of America and dozens of other wonderful cultural transmissions. I've never been able to get shortwave radio reception as good as that anywhere else.
As far as my impression of the size of the island goes, having married a foreigner in 1991 my vacation time throughout the 90s was mostly spent in my wife's country (Thailand). Because of that I personally didn't visit the island for appx. 10 years. Upon returning after that hiatus, I was actually surprised to find it BIGGER than I had remembered it. Its size is something the photographs don't give justice to. The fact that it has more than a mile of ocean frontage might hint at its size. It is big enough that even with 9 of us camping, it's possible for everybody to be off on their own doing something, out of view of everybody else.
Happy times!
I wish I could afford to buy it from my folks, but alas, my fortunes disappeared along with the dotcom bubble. Those sure were the days, huh? hehe
There is a spot - it's actually at the rear-left of the photo above, the dark cliff below to the left of the tents - where freshwater trickles down the cliff. I think that freshwater is spring-fed.
The funny thing is that there are several "Ram Islands" in Maine. Ours is the northernmost and, (I think), the largest.
It was named "Ram Island" because sheep were kept there. When my folks bought it in 1970 there were a number of sheep on the island along with a wooden building for them to take shelter in. The building was there throughout my youth into young adulthood (I am 37 now) but it collapsed sometime in the early 1990s and has since melted into the ground without a trace.
There is at least one sheep (ram?) on the island at the moment. There are a few photos here:
http://flickr.com/photos/astanhope/tags/ram/
My parents are artists - they never could afford to build a house there.