A home, like a woodpile, says more than you might think. Its strength, its order, its endurance—all are reflections of the hands and intentions that built it. In Maine, where winters are long and preparation is part of survival, even the woodpile became a measure of character.
By the late nineteenth century, young women here were told they could judge a suitor not by his words but by his stack of firewood. For those curious, the following “rule of thumb” once guided such judgments:
- Upright and solid pile: Upright and solid man
- Low pile: Cautious man, possibly shy or weak
- Tall pile: Big ambitions, but beware of sagging and collapse
- Unusual shape: A free thinker, open spirit—but construction may be weak
- Flamboyant pile, widely visible: Extroverted, but possibly a bluffer
- A lot of wood: A man of foresight, loyal
- Not much wood: A life lived hand-to-mouth
- Logs from big trees: Appetite for life, but rash and extravagant
- Pedantic pile: Perfectionist; may be introverted
- Collapsed pile: Weak will, poor priorities
- Unfinished pile, logs on the ground: Unstable, lazy, prone to drunkenness
- Everything tossed in a heap: Ignorant, lazy, decadent, possibly all three
- Old and new wood piled together: Be suspicious—could be stolen wood
- Large & small logs together: Frugal, suggests thoughtfulness
- Rough, gnarled logs: Persistent and strong-willed, or bowed by burdens
- No woodpile: No husband
Just as a woodpile once revealed a man’s character, a home still reveals the story of its owners—strength, foresight, and the care that went into building it.
At Maine Home Connection, we help people find homes with that same lasting character, where every detail is stacked with intention.
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