O’ Oysters Providing a Mobile Oyster Feast We bring the oysters to you! • We source fresh, clean, cold-water oysters • We are pleased to work small parties or large • We service Southern and Mid-Coast Maine • We will shuck oysters indoors or out It’s easy and fun to host an oyster event! • We will expertly suggest appropriate quantities and varieties • We are responsible for the entirety of service including clean-up • We serve four accouterments alongside our oysters Contact: Lucas Myers, Owner & Operator 207-632-7247 / lucas@ooysters.com weddings, holiday parties, educational tastings, corporate events, bridal showers, retirement parties, backyard fun: Oysters Make Every Event Even Better find us on-line at www.ooysters.com O’ Oysters Providing a Mobile Oyster Feast We bring the oysters to you! • We source fresh, clean, cold-water oysters • We are pleased to work small parties or large • We service Southern and Mid-Coast Maine • We will shuck oysters indoors or out It’s easy and fun to host an oyster event! • We will expertly suggest appropriate quantities and varieties • We are responsible for the entirety of service including clean-up • We serve four accouterments find us on-line at www.ooysters.com We Bring Oysters to You! Event Planners: Hire us to shuck and serve oysters at your next gathering! Find more information on our website or contact us directly! Lucas Myers, Owner & Operator (207) 632-7247 - lucas@ooysters.com www.ooysters.com Holiday Parties, Corporate Events, Weddings, Educational Tastings, Retirement Parties, and More! n o v e m b e r 2 0 1 8 9 5 Iwouldn’tcallitrewarding.I’dcallitfullcircle. NowthatsoundslikeGirlWithADragonTattoo.Ifthiswere theMillenniumMagazineinterview,I’dqueryaboutyour name,Reade.Soundslikeafamilyname.Howfarback doesitgo?’ It’s German, like Brower, my surname. I’m adopted. Howdidyouandyourwifemeet?It’saromanticstory thatyoufollowedhertoMaine. It’s not accurate. I met Martha at a Christ- mas party in Watertown, Massachusetts. [After having graduated from UMass Amherst, with a degree in marketing] I’d been living with my dad in Martha’s Vineyard for six months, and my next- door neighbor Renee invited me. The par- ty was on Saturday night, December 20, 1980. I’d been doing some repairs–some spackling with my dad. We stopped for dinner. He looked up. “I thought you were going to a party. Eat your pizza. Drink your beer. Go to the party.” I put on a pink shirt, made an origami bird, walked to Renee’s, and put the bird on the Christmas tree when I came in. Mar- tha asked Renee, who put the bird up there? She was a first-year art teacher at Waltham High. When Proposition 2.5 happened, the school lost three art teachers, including Martha. Martha got a job in Thomaston af- ter seeing an ad for the position in the Bos- ton Globe. She was chosen out of 75 appli- cants as an art teacher. Just fact checking. We’re in the 1980s. That was a pink shirt? Martha later made an artwork of it, in pink gesso. It hangs in our hallway: December 20, 1980. WhatwereyoudrivingwhenyoucametoMaine? Aredearly1970sToyotaCorollawithsomerust. You’re an eye collector, working on a scale few can imagine. You’ve mentioned Martha’s image of your trying to put the pieces of a giant puzzle together before. But nobody’s ever wondered to ask you what the picture on the puzzle is. Do you have any idea of what the puzzle will look like when you’re finished? I have no idea what the puzzle looks like. It would spoil it for me to see it. That’s the last thing I’d want to see. n ForalistofBrower’snewspapersandprintingclients,visit http://bit.ly/BrowerPortlandMonthly. “Losing such a wonderful leader and devoted grandfather was the most difficult change and loss. In terms of material objects, the plan to have the collection and proper- ties go to auction for charity was al- ways part of the family dialogue, so we were well prepared and enthusi- astic for those changes.” The young heiress’s own philan- thropic passions cen- ter on healthy hors- es and the justice system. “I care a great deal about equine welfare and often work with the Humane Society of the U.S. on equine welfare programs. On a humanitarian level, our family foundation, the David Rockefeller Fund, works exten- sively in the area of criminal justice. I see this as one of the most important issues facing the United States at this time, one in which we must see policy change.” Style & Stables (continued from page 55) What’s the big deal about Acadia? The close proximity of the mountains to the ocean and granite shores is particularly special. It’s the com- bination of spruce trees and ocean air that is the most wonderful smell. Of course jumping off the dock into the ocean takes your breath away but then there is nothing more refreshing. n