Membership Moments – January 2025

By Rick Grotton,
Membership Committee Director
207 582-5915

Have you made plans for the New Year for your Grange? Membership should be a top priority in achieving your goals for the year. Without members, we have no Grange. New ideas, new discussions, and new members are always needed. So, here is a list you and your Grange must consider:

BE ACTIVE. Plan events accordingly and remind members and nonmembers of your meeting times. Committees should be set up and working.
REACH OUT. Let the Community and town know what you are doing and request help from them to plan community events. Keep the community up-to-date with projects and offer assistance.
COMMUNICATION. Keep your members informed and practice your floorwork so that visitors will know that you are solid in tradition and rituals. Make a good impression. All members should know what is happening in your Grange. Maybe create a town newsletter or join a community newspaper.
LISTEN. Hear what your members and the Community have to say. Improvements are always needed from within or from outside of Grange. Write down their thoughts.
BE POSITIVE. Always make your meetings productive and inspirational to create enthusiasm. Talk highly of your Grange to nonmembers. Encourage them to join by being upbeat, positive, and enthusiastic.
NEW MEMBERSHIP. Create a membership committee or encourage all members to bring in new members. Make a contest to see who can bring in (and keep) the most new members during a period of time. Have fun in your quest for new members.

Make a plan to set goals for the upcoming year, incorporating the above references. Keep up the good work!

Please have a member read these columns at a regular or Pomona meeting so that ALL members will be informed. Reading these columns will spark some ideas to help with your membership drive.

Fraud Watch-Credit Repair Scams

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

Overwhelmed by holiday bills? Youโ€™re not alone โ€” and you donโ€™t have to face your debt alone either. The New Year is the perfect time to take control of your finances โ€” but beware of criminal scammers offering quick fixes that are too good to be true.

Scammers often exploit financial stress by promising instant relief or quick results to become debt-free. These schemes typically involve up-front fees, bad advice like avoiding your creditors, or vague claims about what services they actually provide.

Before committing to a debt relief service and providing your sensitive personal information, research reviews and check for complaints with organizations like the Better Business Bureau to ensure their credibility. If you need help getting out of debt, turn to an organization like the Nonprofit National Foundation for Credit Counseling.

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

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.

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Chaplain’s View – January 2025

Christine Hebert, MSG Chaplain
(207) 743-5277

Going forward in the new year, let us remember to be kind to one another, spreading love, joy, happiness, and faith. Let us have faith enough so we can hope for anything we want. Why not hope for kindness, joy, happiness, and love?

Being kind to one another is showing love.

“And now abideth faith, hope, and love, but the greatest of these is love.”

I Corinthians 13:13

Happy New Year!

An optimist stays up until midnight to see the new year in. A pessimist stays up to make sure the old year leaves.

Bill Vaughan

Communication Shorts 12-31-2024

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!

January Bulletin Is Coming Soon!

The deadline for posts/columns for the January Bulletin is Tuesday, January 14, 2025. Submit your stuff! Recent issues of the Bulletin can be found on the Program Books and Information Page.

We’re Still Looking for Help!

In case you missed it, we’re looking for your comments regarding both property and liability insurance on your Grange Hall! I know people have been busy with the holidays, but we’d like to summarize and share the information by January 15, 2025. See the original request and help us out!

Words for Thirds

Our official release date is January 18, 2025 but you can check out the Words for Thirds Resource Pages here. We’ve got some surprises coming! Stay tuned!

Loving the Grange

It’s not a resolution, but one of my goals for this year is to post at least one reason to love the Grange each month in 2025. The easiest way for you to help make this happen is for you to fill out this simple form. You can answer more than once! Why do you love the Grange?

Reminder! 2024 is now 2025

It usually takes a bit to get in the habit of writing the correct year. Thanks to technology, getting the year right is somewhat automated, but we still need to pay attention!

Consider this Idea!

The MSG Event Calendar for 2025 is pretty bare at this point. Directors and Committee Chairs, please ensure your contest deadlines and events are listed! Granges, submit your programs and events!ย You are planning ahead, right?

Think about this!

“Being busy does not always mean real work. The object of all work is production or accomplishment and to either of these ends there must be forethought, system, planning, intelligence, and honest purpose, as well as perspiration. Seeming to do is not doing.”

Thomas A. Edison

Online Directories Available 24-7

  • The ODD Directory features all state officers, directors, and deputies with contact information.
  • 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.

Wishing you the magic and joys…

Happy Holidays Christmas Sign

Help Wanted!

Grangers help each other!

Heather Popadak, treasurer of Enterprise Grange #48 shares that she has “received notice from our insurance company that they will no longer provide coverage for their building” in April 2025.

This is not an unfamiliar challenge.

Heather asks that we solicit information from other Granges regarding any companies and coverage you have been able to arrange. Note that there is usually a difference between building insurance (fire, etc.) and liability insurance (people getting hurt).

You can add a comment to this post (see the link at the bottom of the post), use the submit information tab, or send an email to the webmaster. We’ll collect and summarize the information. (Let us know if you’d prefer to remain anonymous.)

Exploring Traditions – December, 2024

Meandering Around the Grange Way of Life


Are we stuck in traffic?

By Walter Boomsma, Guest Columnist

Seth Godin recently penned a post (Listening to organizational decline) about getting stale and fading away. He listed some of the comments one might hear as it happens. While heโ€™s talking about โ€œfor profitโ€ companies, it doesnโ€™t take too much imagination to apply them to the Grange. Come to think of it, it doesnโ€™t take too much imagination to apply them to individuals.

There might be a reason I have been having a lot of conversations recently about aging. One that I found particularly interesting was with someone twenty years younger than me. I was both amused and troubled by his perspective. I was amused by our difference in age. I was troubled by his desire to โ€œslow downโ€ and do less. Tempting as it was, I did not ask if he was considering getting stale and fading away. I wanted to hear a desire to do different, not less.

I confess that Iโ€™m often tempted to do less. As another friend suggests, we are playing in the fourth quarter of the game of life. That means different objectives and strategies are often appropriate. But itโ€™s important to choose wisely. The comment that Seth offers as evidence of getting stale and fading away is, โ€œNo one will notice.โ€ Every Grange has members who have faded away. And we have far too many Granges that have faded away.

โ€œIโ€™m really tired tonight, and itโ€™s cold. I think Iโ€™ll skip the meeting. No one will notice.โ€ We can even โ€œupgradeโ€ that to โ€œLetโ€™s cancel tonightโ€™s meeting. Itโ€™s really cold, it might snow, and we donโ€™t have much business. No one will notice.โ€ Adding the justification that โ€œno one will noticeโ€ serves as a sign that we are hearing organizational decline.

Itโ€™s always easier to do less. And itโ€™s not too difficult to find a reason or excuse that makes sense. โ€œNo one will notice. We donโ€™t have the money. Weโ€™re getting by. People donโ€™t care. People arenโ€™t interested. Itโ€™s not in the new manualโ€ฆโ€

By command of the Worthy Master, I proclaim this Grange opened in ample form for promoting the welfare of our country and of mankind, and for advancing the interests, elevating the characters, and increasing the influence of all Patrons of Husbandry by properly transacting our business and by exemplifying our principles in Faith, in Hope, in Charity and with Fidelity.

Overseerโ€™s Proclamation when opening a meeting.

Can it be that no one will notice if we stop doing that? The issue is not any one specific thing. There are times when it probably makes sense to cancel (or miss) a meeting. The question before us is whether or not we are an organization in decline. T.S. Eliot raised this sad question regarding the world itself in 1925 with the last line of his famous poem โ€œThe Hollow Men.โ€

This is the way the world ends, not with a bang but a whimper.

T.S. Eliot

Seth concludes his post with the analogy that we are often not simply sitting in traffic; we are the traffic.โ€ Youโ€™ve probably heard the version, โ€œIf youโ€™re not part of the solution, youโ€™re part of the problem.โ€ Regardless of how we express it, these are some things for us to consider as we start a new calendar year. Maybe itโ€™s time to do some things that will get noticed. Perhaps itโ€™s time to โ€œ…open in ample form for promoting the welfare of our country and of mankind, and for advancing the interests, elevating the characters, and increasing the influence of all Patrons of Husbandry by properly transacting our business and by exemplifying our principles in faith, in hope, in charity and with fidelity.โ€ People will notice!


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.

Communications Column – December 2024

By Walter Boomsma
207 343-1842
Communications Director

Making it Work

How providential that I recently received this email from Larry Bailey, Master of Ocean View Grange:

FYI – The dictionaries for the Ocean View Grange “WORDS FOR THIRDS” project have been ordered. There are two third-grade classes to whom we will distribute the books. The students have always seemed excited and grateful for getting the dictionaries. I was very surprised to see that response when we first gave out the dictionaries given that we live in an electronics and internet-based world.

Larryโ€™s email was sent to membersโ€”I was copied. Communication creates involvement and allows people to feel engaged even if they are not directly participating. As another example, we recently completed Valley Grangeโ€™s โ€œDictionary Dayโ€ Words for Thirds Program. One of those days received front-page coverage in a weekly newspaper. As a direct result, a woman located some distance away sought out and called our secretary, explaining how much a dictionary meant to her as a child. She also mailed a $100 donation to us to support the program. She wanted to be part of what we were doing.

Words for Thirds is a program with a huge potential impact, particularly when we think about the communication aspect. What child doesnโ€™t enjoy a gift? One reason I strongly urge an in-school presentation is that we are delivering more than dictionaries. We are delivering interest and care for our kids. Our organization and its members care about our third graders and their learning opportunities. I love telling the story of a high school student who saw and recognized me. She approached me to share that. I admitted she had an advantage because I did not recognize her. She explained, โ€œI just want you to know that I still have the dictionary you and the Grange gave me when I was in third grade.โ€

Gifts are a form of communication. The impacts of the gift and the things we do (and donโ€™t do) are yet another form of communication. Itโ€™s trite but true that sometimes what we do shouts so loud people canโ€™t hear what we say. One of the things to love about Words for Thirds is it shouts and does a lot of good things loudly!


โ–บ FACT: We currently have sixteen Granges here in Maine participating in or interested in Words for Thirds!

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View from the Farm – December 2024

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.

Meeting the Neighbors

You never know what your neighbor is up to.

Maine sports a lot of driveways that head off into the woods.ย  Some for quite a distance, but even a small patch of woods disguises what lies beyond the driveway entry.ย 

At Quill’s End, most of what we do is visible from the road, and more so when the critters are above our farm in our neighbor’s field.ย  For most of the abbreviated grazing season, the draft horses have been up in that field.ย  Folks have grown accustomed to seeing them there and now associate these fairly new additions with the farm.ย 

If you have ever heard a knocking on your front door at odd hours of the night, you have your own special fears of what it could mean.ย  If your children are out and about, a 1:30 am banging on your door puts your heart in a place where it should not dwell.ย  If you happen to own livestock, well…it is hard to describe.

Friday night brought a rare occurrence when Benjamin was away in Vermont for meetings (ironically a board retreat for the Draft Animal Power Network) and Carolyn was away contra dancing, staying at a friend’s overnight.ย  It also brought the rare occurrence of a 1:30 am knocking on our door for animals in the road.

I’d like to say that we are inexperienced in this regard, but I’d be lying.ย  In our defense, though, it has not always been our animals in the road.ย  Sometimes, wildlife in the road has warranted a late-night passerby to call the sheriff to get us out of bed.ย  Yet, as the most visible livestock-owning farm, it just stands to reason that our door getsย aย knock.ย  If the animals don’t belong to us, we are often expected to know whose they are.ย  It is also noteworthy to mention that humans don’t see that well in the dark, or perhaps we see what we expect we should see.

After answering the door, Heather and I bundled up to head outdoors.ย  The woman knocking said our horses were out, running down the highway.ย  The temperature that night was in the mid-teens, and the cool night came with an amazing, clear sky that was punctured only by the headlamps we were wearing.ย We bundled up because we knew that we might be out awhile.ย 

A man met me in the driveway after I turned the barn lights on and mentioned that he saw the horses go above the barn.ย I told him that was where I was headed as the horse’s paddock includes a portion of the barn and a fenced “yard” behind the barn.

I counted all three Quill’s End horses in their paddock and walked the fence line which was intact.ย A second man came out of our field saying he just saw the two runaway horses in the field.ย 

Oh!ย The mystery was on.ย  Glad our draft horses were all accounted for and had not been gallivanting, we listened to the description of the two horses that were on the loose.ย Spitting images of the Belgians, we were told.ย We ran down the list of draft horses in the surrounding area.ย Newly acquainted with these neighbors of ours, they immediately started calling other neighboring horse owners to find out who was missing two horses.ย And off they went into the dark night, game for the adventure they’d encountered, the third in their party keeping the horses in sight and in phone contact from the lower fields.

Heather and I headed indoors to gather our wits, expecting that the end of our involvement had not yet arrived.ย The next phone call was from the sheriff.ย  The sheriff’s office apparently has our phone number on file for “loose critters.”ย  They definitelyย should.ย  I don’t particularly like it, but they should.ย  Sheriff’s deputies are not trained in the breed characteristicsย of horses.ย  They also are not very good-humored at that particular hour when asked if they are, I found out.

Since horses were on the loose and in our general vicinity, and frankly, not much else was going on at 1:45 am, I got bundled up again, grabbed a couple of halters, and headed down the road.ย The two gentlemen had already caught one horse.ย I parked my truck in a driveway and put a halter on this cunning saddle horse.ย She might go 15 hands and 900 pounds (a good deal smaller and quite different looking than our draft horses).ย The other one was soon apprehended as well, and you know what?ย I did know just where they belonged.ย  No one would ever guess because they live half a mile down our neighbor’s driveway into the woods.


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. Heather is Vice President of Halcyon Grange #345 and writes a newsletter for their farm’s buying club of farmers in her area and has generously permitted us to share some of their columns with Grangers. Visit the Quill’s End Farm Facebook Page for more information.