Exploring Traditions – October, 2025

Meandering Around the Grange Way of Life


By Walter Boomsma, Guest Columnist

Should Stewards do that?

โ€œTo these you will furnish every facility, by referring them to the library, to improve their minds, and incite them to use every effort to attain the highest rank in their calling. It is also your duty to keep safely and in proper order the property of the Grange.โ€

Installing officerโ€™s charge to the Steward
during the installation of officers

As a bit of a wordsmith, I might have found an โ€œerrorโ€ in the Installation of Officers Ritual. Do you see it? Since I can rarely resist a back story, Iโ€™ll explain that while working on our Book Exchange Program, I developed some curiosity about the existence of Grange Libraries. A search of the Ritual found only one use of the term โ€œlibrary.โ€ Itโ€™s used in the installation of the Steward and is quoted above. It answered my first question. While there is no formal position of Grange Librarian, the Steward is responsible for all property of the Grange and would, therefore, be responsible for a Grangeโ€™s library.

But do we really want the Steward to โ€œincite (members) to use every effort to attain the highest range of their calling?โ€ In contemporary thinking, “incite ” refers to provoking or encouraging someone to act in a violent or negative way, while “excite ” means to stir up strong emotions or feelings, often positive ones like happiness or enthusiasm.

Picture this. During an officer installation, the installing officer is charging the Steward, who is listening carefully and critically. When the installing officer pauses for breath, the Steward interrupts.

โ€œLet me get this straight. You said that I should incite members to use every effort to maintain the highest rank of their calling. Does that mean I should start a riot or encourage them to do something illegal or negative? Iโ€™m not sure we want to do that!

If I were there, Iโ€™d be very interested in the installing officerโ€™s response, wouldnโ€™t you? In fairness to our forebears, the word has not always had a negative connotation. Its core meaning was about spurring or rousing others to action that was not necessarily negative. However, the more recent context has given the word a negative feeling. So, it might not be the wrong word, but there are far better synonyms, such as inspire or encourage.

Wordsmiths tend to be meticulous, and I am willing to be held to that standard. But thinking about the Ritual and what weโ€™re agreeing to isnโ€™t such a bad thing.

Itโ€™s common to hear the observation that the Degrees and Installation are too long. While I understand the objection, I often wonder if they are long enough. Maybe not so much in time, but in depth. We are always anxious to fill vacancies. โ€œHaste makes waste,โ€ Henry David Thoreau warns us. As a traditionalist, I value the Ritual. I love the Ritual. When I slow down and think about it, I love it even more. I have occasionally wondered if we might benefit from an annotated ritual in the form of a book that more deeply explains (notice I didnโ€™t say โ€œincitesโ€) and excites us as new members and as new officers. The Rich Ritual is not so much about how we march or when to stand as it is about the Grange Way of Life we are agreeing to and, in the case of officer positions, what we are responsible for doing. Those are actions, and much more important than words


Any degree or ritual quotations are from the forty-seventh edition of the 2023 Subordinate Grange Manual or the most recent edition of the Pomona Grange Manual. The views and opinions expressed in “Exploring Traditions” are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official doctrine and policy of the Grange. Information about the book “Exploring Traditionsโ€”Celebrating the Grange Way of Life” can be found at http://abbotvillagepress.com, on Mr. Boomsma’s Amazon Author Page, or by contacting the author.

CWA Report – October 2025

By Margaret Henderson, Director
Committee on Women’s Activities
207 948-2762

Committee on Women’s Activities

Here is a list of the winners from the contests that were judged in August:

  • Class A: Afghans: Hannah Bureood
  • Class B: Doilies: Sally Schofield
  • Class C: Embroidery: Gailย  Butterfield
  • Class D: 3 Piece Baby Set: Rosanna Starks
  • Class E: Plastic Canvas: Elmira Collins
  • Class F: Counted Cross Stitch: Elmira Collins
  • Class G: Adult Garment: Rosanna Starks
  • Class I: Quilted Wall Hanging: Rachel Nelson
  • Class J: Stuffed Toy: Isabel Stinson
  • Class K: Baby Afghan: Elmira Collins
  • Class L: Childrenโ€™s Garment: Ann Burns
  • Class M: Table Runner: Kathy Gowen
  • Class N: Miscellaneous: Rosanna Starks
  • Class O: Decorated Item: Rachel Nelson
  • Class P: Wooden Item: Phillip Parsons
  • Class Q: Sewing: Karen McCarrick
  • Quilts: Class B: Machine Quilted: Kathy Gowen
  • Quilts: Class C: Hand Tied: Grace Oโ€™Brien
  • Quilts: Class D: Pieced by Entrant, quilted by someone else: Karen McCarrick
  • Quilts: Class E: Baby Quilts: Jackie Morgan
  • Baking: Women: Anne Staples
  • Baking: Men: Clay Collins
  • Baking: Youth: Portia Zaccadelli

A big thank you to all of my committee members for all of their help. It was awesome to see all of the wonderful entries. Thank you to everyone who enters to keep these contests going. I hope to see many of you at State Grange Session.

Passion to Progress

By Mill Stream Junior Granger Natalie Heck

My Girl Scout troop, 2096, makes birthday bags every year for Juliette Gordon Lowโ€™s birthday. This is a project we have been doing for eight years. We make birthday bags for people who donโ€™t have enough money to have a nice birthday party for a loved one. We put cake mix, frosting, sprinkles, candles, paper plates, and napkins in the bags. Then we take them to the food bank. The people who volunteer at the food bank say that their customers really appreciate the birthday bags. It makes me happy to know that maybe a little girl or boy is having a nice birthday when they might not have been able to otherwise. This project inspired me to volunteer in person.

On March 15, 2025, I spent my morning working in the food bank at the First Baptist Church in Mount Vernon, Maine. The food bank serves my neighbors here in Vienna and Mount Vernon, as well as the surrounding communities. My mama helped me reach out to food bank volunteers and get permission to come in and help. We arrived at 8:00AM and helped carry all the fresh food into the building that had been donated by Hannaford. I helped sort fruits and vegetables and baked goods onto tables, and some canned goods onto shelves. When the food bank opened, I helped people find what they needed and packed it into bags for them.

In between customers, I interacted with the other volunteers and talked about my pageant experience. I helped make toiletry bags, and split bulk toilet paper packages into smaller bundles. At one point, I saw one of our Girl Scout birthday bags go home with a family. I felt really proud that I was helping people, and that I knew our kits were being taken.

I completed over fifty hours of community service this year, but this was my favorite because I felt active in my community. I was sad that so many people need help but felt happy that I was able to make a difference. I think the Mount Vernon Food Bank is very important to the people in this area. A lot of the community seems to rely on it.

I would like to be able to give my time to work there again in the future. My whole Girl Scout troop is going to volunteer at the food bank in November to help with Thanksgiving boxes, and I hope to be able to help independently again soon.


Natalie Heck is an active Junior 1+ Granger from Mill Stream Grange in Vienna.ย  She recently receivedย the Passion to Progress Award for this essay, which describes her volunteering experience at the Mount Vernon Food Bank. While it focuses on her work with her Girl Scout Troop, she and her sister, Caroline, are amazing Junior 1+ Grangers who certainly have a passion for progress in community service.

View from the Farm – October, 2025

Webmaster’s note: The format of this column includes all of the Quill’s Endians participating at various times and in various ways! Phil writes this month’s column.

Moving a Tad Faster

So it happens once again. The nip in the air, the first hard frost, the first fire of the season in the wood stove . Now time is a wastin’, and the cool morning starts make a body move just a tad faster. We know where we are headed. 

What needs finishing is everything, because summer lulled us into comfort, seduced us with sunlight past suppertime. Now the frost slaps us awake. Remember! It’s Coming! Just as the sun disappears for over half the day, we awake. To action, October cries when September fails. 

Even the birds stopping on their way south seem frantic now flitting from goldenrod to aster to burdock as they focus on a different task than raising broods. The wild turkeys seem to have time for leisure still as they stroll the field picking at this and that on their way to the orchard.

We have switched gears now that the Ford tractor is back together. The second kitchen, firewood, building projects, and barn winter preparation now take our spare moments of daylight in between milking times. Soon, the storage potatoes and garlic planting will be added to the list. That reads like a lot…here is hoping November is mild.


Heather and Phil Retberg and their three children run Quill’s End Farm, a 105-acre property in Penobscot that they bought in 2004. They use rotational grazing on their fifteen open acres and are renovating thirty more acres from woods to pasture to increase grazing for their pigs, grass-fed cattle, lambs, laying hens, and goats. Quill’s Endians are members of Halcyon Grange and publish a newsletter for their farm’s buying club of farmers in her area and generously permit us to share some of their columns with Grangers. Visit the Quill’s End Farm Facebook Page for more information.

View from the Farm – September, 2025

Webmaster’s note: The format of this column includes all of the Quill’s Endians participating at various times and in various ways! Phil writes this month’s column.

Formidable Fall Tasks

It happened this week.ย  We grazed the last of the standing stockpiled forage and started to feed hay.ย  The first spot that we are “bale grazing” is next to a swale that we filled with soil last year to better define it.ย  It also serves as the spillway for our small pond.ย  The wet springs of the last couple of years had made it a prime candidate for muddy grazing in the shoulder seasons.ย  Hopefully, the extra soil will funnel the overflow and feeding out hay in this spot will produce better grazing in the future.ย 

After finishing up in that spot, barring a miraculous return of growth for fall grazing, the cows will venture north to baleย graze a section of our neighbor’s field that can really use rehabilitation.ย  A drought put to good use?

As the frenzied pace of August winds down, our energies are directed toward the project list.ย  Our fall list is a formidable one; topmost is streamlining our milking chore time by finishing a dairy processing kitchen.ย  As possible, I’ve been plugging away this last month to frame a ceiling and run the electrical wiring.ย  Equipment is starting to arrive with more in the wings awaiting procurement.ย  Finishing this kitchen space will allow us to house a miniature bulkย tank that will rapidly chill and hold milk reducing the need to have someone at the ready to bottle as we milk each chore time.ย  This will make it a lot more feasible to do chore time without assistance, freeing up a farmer for other tasks.ย 

This particular project has been 15 years in the making.ย  Well, in the starting anyway.ย  I guess itย  took Carolyn’s departure to Sweden to become urgent enough, though it’sย been on our minds since she was five and…started a few times since then.ย ย She has dutifully bottled milk twice a day for the last 4 years.

Despite the formidable list, September is the month of overflowing bounty for Maine farmers.ย  Everywhere on the farm, the year’s labor shows rewards.ย  This year’s new hens are laying eggs in abundance now.ย  The last batch of big meat birds is in the freezer, and Benjamin’s garden is producing delights.ย  Delights that pair well with dairy, pork, and veal.ย  Make us your meal plan, we won’t disappoint.


Heather and Phil Retberg and their three children run Quill’s End Farm, a 105-acre property in Penobscot that they bought in 2004. They use rotational grazing on their fifteen open acres and are renovating thirty more acres from woods to pasture to increase grazing for their pigs, grass-fed cattle, lambs, laying hens, and goats. Quill’s Endians are members of Halcyon Grange and publish a newsletter for their farm’s buying club of farmers in her area and generously permit us to share some of their columns with Grangers. Visit the Quill’s End Farm Facebook Page for more information.

Highland Lake Grange Turkey Supper

Drive through, Roasted Turkey Dinner

Saturday, November 8, 2025, from 4-6 pm

There will be roasted turkey, vegetables, stuffing, mashed potatoes, gravy, bread, cranberry sauce, and cake. The cost is $10.00 per person. Please have the exact price for the meal(s) you want. No substitutions, no pre-orders, you drive up, pay, and receive your meal.

The Grange is located on the corner of Route 302 and Hardy Road in Westbrook.

FMI Joann 207 233 7119

Fraud Watch- Cybersecurity Awareness Month

MSG Communications Resources Logo
Reprinted with permission from AARP’s Fraud Watch Network.

October is National Cybersecurity Awareness Month โ€“ a great time to remind ourselves just how much of our lives take place online and the potential threats that exist in the digital world. Any device that stores information or connects to the internet could become a target for cybercriminals seeking to steal your data. Here are four important ways to help stay safe online.

First, always use strong, unique passwords for each online account you own. Even better, investigate options for getting a free or low-cost password manager such as Bitwarden, Dashlane, LastPass, and others. Newer to the marketplace are passkeys that offer hope that we can move beyond passwords. They verify a user with a biometric (like facial or fingerprint recognition) tied to the device being used to gain access. You can read more about them at aarp.org/personal-technology/passkeys-future.

Second, set up multi-factor authentication when available as added security that goes beyond your username and password to verify that itโ€™s you using your account or device.

Third, turn on automatic software updates to keep your devices up-to-date and secure.

And finally, know that it’s no longer safe to click on links from emails, texts, and online ads. Instead, type web addresses into your browser to ensure you arenโ€™t sent to a copycat site and stick to sites you know and trust.


Report scams to local law enforcement. For help from AARP, call 1-877-908-3360 or visit the AARP Fraud Watch Network at aarp.org/fraudwatchnetwork.

AARP Fraud Watch Network

Need a scam prevention speaker for your group? Click the link to fill out the AARP online form or email me@aarp.org.

Citizens’ Guide to November Referendum

Reprinted with permission from an enewsletter published by Maine Senator Stacey Guerin.

On Nov 4, 2025, voters will have the opportunity to decide on local candidates seeking public office and the fate of two questions appearing on this yearโ€™s ballot

For each referendum election, the Department of the Secretary of State (SOS) publishes a voter guide with the full text of the laws proposed in the referenda.

The full citizensโ€™ guide can be found here.

Elections will be held for various city, town and school board officials. Ballots in some municipalities may also have questions regarding county or local initiatives. Absentee voting across the state began on Monday, Oct.6. To obtain an absentee ballot or for more information about early voting, you can contact your local town office or request an absentee ballot online. If you need information regarding Maine Election Law or have election-related questions, please visit the Secretary of Stateโ€™s website or contact them by phone at 207-624-7736.ย 

What’s Your Sign?

Where’s your sign? What condition is it in? So many possible questions! Signs are a form of communication that we often overlook or fail to notice. Here’s one situation where that’s not the case!

Trenton Grange #550 is seeking quotes for a new sign. Since Grangers help each other, they are seeking recommendations and leads to signmakers who might be interested. You can comment on this post or contact Emily at Trenton Grange for further details or your suggestions. Or, better yet, if you’re in the area, Trenton Grange meets on the third Thursday of each month at 7 pm. The hall is located at 1136 Bar Harbor Road.

Words for Thirds Recognition

The Dictionary Project recently recognized Valley Grange‘s Words for Thirds Project in their “Word of the Day” newsletter. The Word of the Day was “excel.” We strive to do so, and we encourage our students to do the same.

By the way, the dictionaries for this year are arriving today! Dictionary Days are coming soon to Brownville, Harmony, Piscataquis Community, Ridgeview, and SeDoMoCha Elementary Schools.

Photo and quotes from a WABI-TV 5 News Report.

Visit the MSG Words for Thirds Resource Page to learn how your Grange can do this!