Posts Tagged With: Carriage Roads

2017 Trip Seven: Acadia and Cape Cod: Sept. 18

Ellsworth, ME. Tuesday Sept. 19

Thuya Garden

Monday the 18th started great, hit a real “blah” period in the middle of the day, and then ended great. Lets discuss the blah first. Bar Harbor-best summed up by Chris’ comment: “This is ugly. Get us out of here.” To be fair, if you want to shop, go to Bar Harbor. Maybe if you want to eat, try it at night. Bar Harbor is the commercial hub, the lodging hub, the shopping hub, and the eating hub. It is also a cruise ship Mecca with ships stopping almost daily from May through October. Monday one cruise ship dumped 5,000 passengers on to the eager tour guides, shops, etc. I would guess this is no different from other small city locations where cruise ships arrive. Add on other visitors by car, and the streets were jammed. We left immediately.

Now that the blah is behind us, lets move on to the great. Oops, well, weather is not great if you like blue skies. The temperature has been in the mid-60s F and light winds. Fog and clouds have predominated so forget blue sky photos and wonderful vista photographs. Still, it is pleasant walking/hiking weather and fog gives a different dimension to many of the pictures. We have not minded the fog and clouds.

Our first stop was not until almost 9 AM. It takes us about half an hour to reach interesting locations in Acadia from the Hampton Inn in Ellsworth. Thuya Gardens is not far from Asticou Azalea Gardens and is a trove of blooming plants. Also part of the Land and Gardens Preserve, the staff were cutting dead blooms and raking lines in the sand walkways when we arrived.

Thuya Gardens is part of what is called the “Quiet Side” of Acadia National Park. Away from the Bar Harbor crowds, our walks and stops have generally been calm and non-hectic. We continued this pattern with a hike along Friends trail leading to Little Long Pond.

Friends Trail

Spider webs along Friends Trail

Friends Trail suggested to me the forests in the Hobbit and Lord of the Rings series. A variety of soils from spongy to rocky, bent trees casting weird shapes, spider webs hanging from trees, and trails that enticed you in with a pleasant surface but slowly deteriorating to a rocky, steep ascent to the pond. Then you get to the pond, and the carriage roads around it returned you to a pleasant, relaxing walk.

Seal Harbor harbor

By now it was time for a break. Seal Harbor has a small harbor with a few businesses. Main Street could best be described as two parking lanes and one travel lane. My Dad would have loved it; keep your car evenly on either side of the yellow center line. We had just a muffin, tea and smoothie here but the cafe was enveloped in the aromas of lasagna and garlic bread that were the special of the day.

Cadillac Mountain-no blue sky, no blue ocean

We went on the Park Loop Road to Cadillac Mountain. For the uninformed, Cadillac Mountain is the place to go to see the best vistas in the park, particularly at sunrise. Well, the fog has wiped away any sunrise options. 10 AM to 3 PM is supposed to be a very busy time for Cadillac (tour buses from the boats and late rising tourists). It was still patchy fog and clouds, but we gave it a chance, hoping for a break in the sky and maybe a break in the throngs. I guess one out of two is not too bad; the throngs were missing, the fog was present. I don’t think the weather is going to allow for any vista views from Cadillac Mountain for us during our time here.

View from Loop Drive

We continued along the Loop Road, stopping at Sieur de Monts visitor center. Sieur de Monts has a nature center, an Indian artifacts collection run by the Abbe Museum, and the Wild Gardens of Acadia. None of the three intrigued us and we continued driving.

Our hike along the coast to Otter Point

Since the Bar Harbor experience eliminated lunch, we made a quick stop for a candy bar before our 3 PM park ranger hike. The hike was an hour and 3/4 along the eastward facing cliffs ending at the southern tip-Otter Point. Our Ranger informed us that Mount Desert Island was named by the French explorer Samuel de Champlain as “lle de Monts Desert”, meaning island of bare mountains. Evidently it was treeless back in 1604. The island was formed by volcanic action, carved and impacted by glaciers and erosion. Mount Cadillac was a volcano. Much of the rock here is granite-extremely hard.

Around Otter Point

Acadia National Park at 30,000 acres represents only one-half of Mount Desert Island. Private property is scattered through out. The park is not always contiguous with large stretches of private land between parcels of park land. Our hike along the cliffs were along the southeast corner of the island.


Video of waves crashing near Otter Point, Acadia National Park

While the skies were not a beautiful blue, the waves were starting to crash. Hurricane Jose has been downgraded as a tropical storm but is still stirring up wave action along the coast. We hope to see further storm action on Wednesday.

As we hiked back to our car, we conversed with two women watching the waves. One was recuperating from hip surgery and a friend from Boston came up to help her. The local woman recommended a restaurant in Northeast Harbor, the Tan Turtle, where we had dinner.

Ed and Chris Tuesday, Sept 19. (Happy Birthday Jude!)

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2017 Trip Seven: Acadia and Cape Cod: Sept. 16-17

Ellsworth, Maine Sunday Sept. 17

Cruising around Acadia NP and the Cranberry Islands with a fog bank

What happens when travelers wake up at 5 AM? Well, they are waiting for the breakfast doors to open at 6 AM; they are one of the first to shop at the grocery store when it opens at 7 AM; and they “squeeze” in a 2.75 hour boat ride along with hiking 11 miles by dusk. Oh, and they have Maine lobster for lunch and Maine blueberry pie for an afternoon snack. All in all, a fulfilling day although by the end of the last hike, I think a turtle would be walking faster than I was.

Chris and I are in New England for a twelve day adventure. We get to see Deb and Rebecca for four of those days. Saturday was the travel day; we had decided to fly and rent a car versus one of our usual multi-week driving tours. No hassle flying. Driving a rental car is less fun now that we own a newer vehicle. I miss the compass, the back-up camera, the adjustable cruise-control, the quieter door lock sound, etc.

Driving from Boston’s Logan airport, I had left an “avoid tolls” feature in the Google maps driving directions. When we got to the New Hampshire line, we took a thirty minute extra drive and were able to observe a running race, a craft festival, and lots of back roads of New Hampshire. Not a problem though as we had just enough time to have a quick dinner and make it to 5:30 PM church in Kittery Maine. Chris accepted the invitation to bring up the gifts at the Offertory so everybody in church got to wonder who were these strange folks. We made it to the Hampton Inn Ellsworth at 10 PM and crashed.

Asticou Azalea Garden in Northeast Harbor on Mount Desert Island Maine

As you know from paragraph one, we got up early. Our boat cruise was scheduled for 10 AM (please arrive at 9:30 AM they had requested) so we had two hours available to drive a thirty minute trip. Our first stop was at the Asticou Azalea Gardens, only a little over 2 acres in size but wonderfully laid out even when azaleas and rhododendrons are not blooming. A person was out sweeping away gathered leaves so the dirt paths were immaculate. We were impressed with the juxtaposition of plants and shrubs; everywhere one looked was another stunning layout. We should not have been surprised, the Gardens are part of the Mount Desert Land & Garden Preserve, a total of 1,165 acres of gardens, lawns and trails set up decades ago by the Rockefellers to preserve the land for all to enjoy.

our first carriage road hike in Acadia National Park

After the gardens, we took our first hike along one of the famous carriage roads of Acadia National Park. The 45 miles of carriage roads were built between 1913 and 1940 when John D Rockefeller and his family built motor-free byways for horse and carriage to travel around Mount Desert Island. The carriage roads are an example of attention to detail; Rockefeller oversaw much of the work. The road has a deep base with a heavy crown to drain water away. The roads follow the contour of the land, using native granite for the stone and accenting the roadway with native vegetation. Bridges received particular attention; using bridges in New York City’s Central Park for inspiration. While the bridges are steel-reinforced concrete they are faced with native stone.

Upper Hadlock Pond viewed from a carriage road

The walk was pleasant; the roadway smooth and the trees line both sides with overhanging arches. Few people were out. We turned around before making our hoped for destination, one of the bridges based on a bridge in Central Park. We wanted to make sure we were at the cruise docks on time. Of course, we were early. The cruise boat was about the size of the boat we had taken two years ago to Isle Royale National Park, and even though it was not fancy, it was much nicer than the Isle Royale one. It holds about 50 people, we had maybe thirty plus two Park Rangers and two crew-one of whom was a retired park ranger.

Harbor at Hortheast Harbor

The boat ride lasted for two hours and forty-five minutes around the Cranberry Islands, a series of five islands just off Northeast Harbor. Forty five minutes of that was at the town of Isleford, a community of year-round residents, most of whom still fish, and summer residents, who take the daily mail ferry back and forth to the mainland as necessary. Isleford is on Little Cranberry Island. The Cranberrys were named after the fruit which is native to the area. The Native Americans introduced the Europeans to the berry.

Little Cranberry Island has a museum dedicated to the history of the European people who moved here, with fishing being the primary reason to settle here. Maine was settled relatively late; the English and French were contesting the area. After the 1763 Treaty of Paris resolved the issue, settlers came here in greater numbers. They were attracted by the offer of land from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Maine remained part of Massachusetts until 1820 when it split off and became a separate state as part of the Missouri Compromise.

lobster pots at Isleford

Lobster buoys in the water

In Maine, logging and fishing were early commercial activity. Fishing is good due to the currents of Arctic cold water that flows in here, above the Gulf Stream warm waters. Cod was the early fish caught here, salted and shipped around the world. Cod was over-fished and fishermen here who normally go back generations remember that and have taken precautions to keep the lobster fishing from repeating that mistake.

On Little Cranberry, I observed stacks of lobster pots and buoys. Each fisherman has a buoy that is distinctively painted to identify his buoys. The buoys are tied by rope to the pots on the bottom of the ocean; normally several pots are tied together. The fisherman will check the pots once every one to three days and can have several hundreds pots of his own. They may place their pots as far as 20 miles out to sea, or right next to the shore. On our cruise we saw numerous buoys in the water, with the variety of colors a remarkable occurrence.

On Somes Sound looking toward Cadillac Mountain (on the right)

The rangers staffed the museum at Isleford and narrated our trip through the water. We saw cormorants, loons, harbor seals, eagles,etc. The fog removed the chance to view much, but not all, of the shoreline and coast. No matter, the fog presented unique photographic opportunities.

After the boat trip, we had a lobster lunch in Northeast Harbor. Chris and I split a lobster roll and a lobster salad. Both were good but we preferred the lobster salad. Then we headed back to the carriage roads and trails, finishing our trip to Hadlock Pond where we examined one of the 17 bridges Rockefeller had built; this one was specifically modeled after a bridge over the lake at 59th Street in Central Park.

Food for the day

Two separate hikes to the coast followed, the Wonderland hike and Ship Harbor hike. But before hiking, we fortified ourselves with fresh blueberry pie and ice cream at a small, roadside stand in Southwest Harbor. We could have had a lobster dinner at this place too. We also made a quick visit to a lighthouse which could have been skipped.

The Wonderland hike

The Ship Harbor hike

Each hike traveled through the woods leading to the ocean, with the path alternating on rocky ledges and on soft forest paths. It was low tide with minor waves. The Ship Harbor hike was more interesting, longer, and more varied. Fog was intensifying again and daylight starting to lessen so we headed for the hotel and a cheese pizza before we collapsed for the night. It was a long but extremely fulfilling day; it was not until the next day that we realized how truly peaceful and quiet our day had been.

Ed and Chris. Ellsworth Maine. Sept. 18

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