Highland Lake Places Flags

Highland Lake Grange 87, Westbrook, placed flags at Highland Lake Cemetery. The flags are supplied by Stephen Manchester American Legion Post 62. The Grange has been assisting the American Legion with placing flags for several years.

Mill Stream Places Flags

Mill Stream Grange members (l-r) Paul Lavender, Debbie Lavender, Ingrid Grenon, Jill Sampson, Laurie Cunningham, Natalie Heck, Kirsten Heck, and Allan Harville met recently to place flags on the graves of military service veterans at three cemeteries in Vienna.ย  Mill Stream is honored and proud to be able to participate in this community service project. The town of Vienna provides the flags every year…a special thanks to Chris Smith, selectman, for always making sure we have the flags in time for Memorial Day. Also, thanks to member Kathy Berry, who was the photographer.

Ag Trade Show Survey

Reprinted with permission from an e-newsletter published by Maine Representative James White.

The Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation, and Forestry (MDACF) is thinking about adding โ€œSaturday Eventsโ€ to their 2026 Agricultural Trades Show and wants your input.  They are gathering feedback before they finalize decisions and are asking the public to participate in a brief survey and to help spread the word to farmers, agricultural businesses, and anyone interested in attending next yearโ€™s trades show.

The Maine Agricultural Trades Show, hosted annually by the Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation, and Forestry, is a premier event for farmers, producers, and the public to explore Maineโ€™s dynamic agricultural sector.

The MDACF puts on a bustling trade show floor, with exhibits from equipment suppliers, service providers, and agricultural organizations.  Attendees can participate in conferences, certification courses, and workshops covering topics such as sustainable farming, food systems, and natural resource management.  The Maine Agricultural Trades Show also offers opportunities to connect with experts, learn about new technologies, and discover local food and farming initiatives.

To participate in the survey and provide your input for next yearโ€™s show, clickย here.

Communication Shorts 5-23-2025

By Walter Boomsma,
MSG Communications Director
207 343-1842

Communication Shorts are brief (short) but important items posted for your information and use. Please send us your ideas and thoughts!

Sagadahoc Pomona Meetings

Please note the May Sagadahoc Pomona Meeting is cancelled. The next meeting is at Merriconeag Grange in Harpswell on Wednesday, June 25th at 7:00 with a potluck supper at 6:00. FM contact Stephanie Alexander, 207-841-9481

Memorial Day

How will you celebrate? Have you found a ceremony or parade to attend? Will you hang out your flag? Visit a cemetery? Here’s some ideas for you.

Subscribing to the Website

We’ve recently added more subscribers! Remember, we don’t share your email address with anyone, and you get a weekly summary of what’s been posted. Subscribe here! Copy and share that link with new members!

Online Directories Available 24-7

Thanks to those who help us keep these directories current by letting us know of changes! With election of officers coming up, don’t forget!

  • The Directory of Granges features all Granges in the state with a contact person. Please make sure your listing is correct! Visitors to the site consult these directories often.
  • The ODD Directory features all state officers, directors, and deputies with contact information.

Fraud Watch- Spotting Fake QR Codes

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

QR codes are everywhere โ€“ from restaurant menus to package tracking. But where there is innovation, there are criminals exploiting them for fraud. QR codes are now being used by scammers to lead you to phishing websites, where they may steal sensitive details like banking info, login credentials and more.

Before acting on a QR code in the real world, check for signs of manipulation (a sticker over the original QR, for example). And you donโ€™t have to use a QR code โ€“ if youโ€™re at a restaurant, ask for the printed menu. Also, look at emailed or texted QR codes with suspicion; the point of them is to link you to a website when youโ€™re not otherwise online.

Just like when clicking links, it is important to use caution when scanning QR codes to ensure the source is trustworthy.

Be a fraud fighter! If you can spot a scam, you can stop a scam.

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.

Communication Shorts 5-20-2025

By Walter Boomsma,
MSG Communications Director
207 343-1842

Communication Shorts are brief (short) but important items posted for your information and use. Please send us your ideas and thoughts!

May Bulletin Available!

Deadline for May Columns is the 14th! Recent issues of the Bulletin can be found on the Program Books and Information Page in the communications section.

Memorial Day

How will you celebrate? Have you found a ceremony or parade to attend? Will you hang out your flag? Visit a cemetery?

Finding Fairs

The Maine Association of Agricultural Fairs (MAAF) lists Maine Fairs by month. How many will you attend?

Finding Your Maine Legislator

Did you know how easy it is to learn who your Senator and Representative is? Just use this link: https://www.mainechamber.org/find.html.

Subscribe to the Site!

It’s easy and risk-free! With the recent influx of new members and degree recipients, we should see some new subscribers! Remember, we don’t share your email address with anyone, and you get a weekly summary of what’s been posted. Subscribe here! Copy and share that link with new members!

Consider this Idea!

Assume everyone is interested in your Grange Events! Broadcast the news far and wide–including submitting to the Maine Website Calendar. When sending information to the media (including MSG) send the information at least one month before it takes place!

Think about this!

โ€œA life without love is like a year without summer.” 

 Swedish Proverb

Online Directories Available 24-7

  • The Directory of Granges features all Granges in the state with a contact person. Please make sure your listing is correct! Visitors to the site consult these directories often.
  • The ODD Directory features all state officers, directors, and deputies with contact information.

Don’t Let a Tick Make You Sick!

Reprinted from an enewsletter published by UMaine Extension.
  • T: Take and use an EPA-approved repellent. Use DEET, picaridin, IR3535 (Ethyl butylacetylaminopropionate), or oil of lemon eucalyptus on skin. Use permethrin on clothing only.
  • I: Inspect your whole body for ticks daily and after outdoor activities. Check family members and pets too.
  • C: Cover your skin with light-colored long sleeve shirts and pants. Tuck pants into socks.
  • K: Know when you are in tick habitat and take precautions in areas where ticks may live.
  • S: Shower when you get home to remove crawling ticks. Put clothes in the dryer on high heat for 15 minutes before washing to kill ticks on clothes.

Five Minutes at Valley Grange

This video was produced as part of our Community Celebration. You can also read the story in the local paper, the Piscataquis Observer.

Education Aid Scholarships Update

The trustees of the scholarship funds have developed an updated set of criteria, opening the application to any college student seeking assistance, and helping the trustees to decide who should receive scholarships.ย These criteria apply to both the Maine State Grange Educational Aid andย the Howes Nursesโ€™ Scholarship Fund.

A complete package, including the guidelines and application, is available on the website through theย Scholarship Pageย and theย Program Books and Information Page. The deadline for applying is September 15, 2025.

It is imperative to get the current application out to the college students in your area and make them aware of our scholarshipโ€™s availability. You can download and print the packet or just give them this link: 2025 MSG Educational Information.

Donations are always welcome! Make checks payable to Educational Aid and Howes Nursesโ€™ Scholarship Funds. Include your Grange name and number and the amount(s) for each. Send to Nancy Farrington, Secretary/Treasurer, 317 Holman Day Road, Vassalboro ME 04989.

Exploring Traditions – May, 2025

Meandering Around the Grange Way of Life


When Tradition Evolves…

By Walter Boomsma, Guest Columnist

An interesting bit of Grange Trivia is that during our early days, there was much disagreement when members started using the term โ€œGrangerโ€ to describe members. Opponents noted strongly that we are โ€œPatrons of Husbandry.โ€ The conservative position was that the term โ€œGrangeโ€ applied to the building where those patrons meet. Fast forward some decades. During a recent meeting at our hall, a visitor asked what the โ€œP of Hโ€ stood for in our logo.

I just finished reading an excellent book called Brainscapes, written by Rebecca Schwarzlose. The sub-title, โ€œThe warped, wondrous maps written in your brain and how they guide you,โ€ doesnโ€™t quite do it justice. Itโ€™s a fascinating look into the neuroscience of our brains. Science suggests that, in many ways, our brains have a mind of their own. (Yes, Iโ€™m proud of that play on words.) As might be expected, there are some interesting observations regarding our brainโ€™s evolution.

Last summer, when I learned to work with oxen, our instructor warned us that the first thing weโ€™d have to do was convince the team we werenโ€™t trying to kill them. Of course, he was explaining the avoidance of predators instinct remains firmly implanted in our oxenโ€™s brains. Thatโ€™s not a bad thing, but working with them requires an understanding of what and how they think.

We could say the same of human beings. We benefit from an understanding of what and how we think. A goal of books like Brainscapesis to create self-awareness and understanding.

Realizing that organizations are collections of human beings, we can broaden the term โ€œevolutionโ€ to see how organizations change. Much like the biological term, those changes may be slow and triggered by environmental changes. Unlike biological evolution, the timeline is often much shorter. We went from being Patrons of Husbandry to being Grangers in 100+ years.

That early debate ultimately ended quietly. In retrospect, we could understand the change as a response to the environment. Itโ€™s much easier to say โ€œIโ€™m a Grangerโ€ than to say โ€œIโ€™m a Patron of Husbandry.โ€

In a larger sense, the debate continues. Consider, for example, the recent shift of officer titles. Those who favor โ€œpresidentโ€ over โ€œmasterโ€ see this as โ€œevolutionโ€ and a response to our changing social environment. Those who resist are concerned with what gets lost in the process. As is often the case, the odds are good that both sides are right and both sides are wrong.

Some would likely suggest that the Grange has evolved in a way that โ€œPatrons of Husbandryโ€ is no longer an accurate description. Yes, we are still โ€œpatronsโ€ โ€“ people who provide support. But are we still supporting husbandry? Merriam Webster defines the word as โ€œthe cultivation or production of plants or animals, or the control or judicious use of resources.โ€ So, while our focus on farming may be reduced, we are supporters of the โ€œjudicious use of resources.โ€

Itโ€™s easy to forget that change is as much about what we keep as what we abandon. If we learn the lessons of the Degrees, we are still very much interested in agriculture. But weโ€™re not limited to elevating farmers. We also look to nature for the lessons it teaches us. In every sense of the words, we are Patrons of Husbandry.

Evolution happens gradually and often with a lack of critical thinkingโ€”itโ€™s a reaction. Fortunately, humans have the ability to engage in higher levels of thinking. We can do more than react to changes in our environment and society. Perhaps unfortunately, society seems to be evolving at a rapid pace. (One interesting question Brainscapes raises is whether or not individuals are keeping pace with the evolution of society. Our brains are powerful organs, but not without limitations.)

We are rightly proud of the Grangeโ€™s survival as an organization. Whether or not we continue to survive and prosper will largely depend on how we evolve. While itโ€™s important to adapt to our environment, itโ€™s more important that we do so consciously and deliberately. Letโ€™s not wake up some morning and discover weโ€™ve lost what got us here.


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.