The Simple Life, North of ‘the Volvo Line’ (NY Times)
From The New York Times:
By Michelle Falkenstein
Published: January 25, 2008
Kingfield was incorporated in 1816 as part of what was then the Maine District of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. It sits in western Maine’s Longfellow Mountain Range at the confluence of the Carrabassett and West Branch Carrabassett Rivers, north of what a Portland transplant, Donald A. Fowler Jr., calls “the Volvo line.”
“No one drives Volvos north of Portland,” said Mr. Fowler, a lawyer who practices in Kingfield and who skis Sugarloaf nearly every day in winter.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/25/travel/escapes/25havens.html?em&ex=1201410000&en=b68f793f92432e89&ei=5087%0A
By Michelle Falkenstein
Published: January 25, 2008
Kingfield was incorporated in 1816 as part of what was then the Maine District of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. It sits in western Maine’s Longfellow Mountain Range at the confluence of the Carrabassett and West Branch Carrabassett Rivers, north of what a Portland transplant, Donald A. Fowler Jr., calls “the Volvo line.”
“No one drives Volvos north of Portland,” said Mr. Fowler, a lawyer who practices in Kingfield and who skis Sugarloaf nearly every day in winter.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/25/travel/escapes/25havens.html?em&ex=1201410000&en=b68f793f92432e89&ei=5087%0A
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