Acadia National Park and Bar Harbor Maine
L.L. Bean flagship store in Freeport, Maine
We had also heard about lobster rolls at Red's Eats in Wiscasset, Maine. So we had lunch there as you can see from the picture below.Along the way we stopped in Freeport, Maine at the first and largest store for L.L. Bean. Catherine has purchased things from them for years and she was interested in seeing their flagship store. They have fly fishing ponds stocked with trout and all sorts of clothes and camping gear.
Bluenose Inn at Bar Harbor
During our entire trip, up to this point, we kept missing rain storms. It would rain somewhere right before we arrived and then stop, or rain somewhere right after we left. Well our luck finally ran out when we got to Bar Harbor. However, the Bluenose Inn where we stayed had a nice porch in front and we sat there and watched the storm. Catherine is standing on the porch in the picture above.
The next day the rain stopped and we were able to go to "downtown" Bar Harbor. It is an attractive little town with shops and restaurants. We caught a bus tour there that took us on a tour of Acadia National Park. Our bus driver was a retired teacher and U.S. Park Ranger who had grown up in the Bar Harbor area, so he provided a lot of local color during the tour. One tidbit that he told us about was that each of the lobster fisherman mark their lobster traps with a buoy that each has unique markings so they can tell which traps are theirs.
Catherine at the top of Mount Desert Island Acadia National Park
Mount Desert Island is a glacier-formed island in the Atlantic Ocean off the northern coast of Maine. Bar harbor and Acadia National Park adjacent to one another and are located on Desert island.
Lupine blooming in a meadow in Acadia National Park
Our guide told us that lupine are not native to Maine so the park administration hired some workers to remove them. Tourists saw the workers removing the lupine and gave the workers such a bad time that the workers refused to continue to remove the lupine. So the lupine were there for us to enjoy.
In this shot to the right middle you can see see a beaver hut. Our guide told us that the Park Rangers have to build drains on the ponds or the beavers will dam them up and flood the roads.
Coastline in Acadia National Park
The part of Acadia National Park that I enjoyed the most was the coastline.
Rockefeller purchased and donated about 11,000 acres, almost a third of Acadia National Park. He also built a 57 mile system of private carriage roads. The roads are still open today for walking, biking, and horse drawn carriages.
Catherine downtown Bar Harbor
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Labels: Acadia National Park, Bar Harbor, Maine, Mount Desert Island, Photographs, Pictures, Story, Travel