New England Fall 2023

September - October 2023
A 15-day adventure by Amy and Pat Read more
  • 45footprints
  • 2countries
  • 15days
  • 604photos
  • 23videos
  • 3.5kmiles
  • Day 3

    Niagara Falls 3

    September 25, 2023 in Canada ⋅ ☁️ 63 °F
  • Day 4–10

    Day 4 Erie Canal

    September 26, 2023 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 55 °F

    Today was a drive day from Niagara Falls to Massachusetts...another drive tomorrow and we will arrive at Acadia National Park in Maine. It was a sunny day, and we had a little hitchhiker for miles. We stopped at the Port Byron Erie Canal Heritage Park to stretch our legs and learn some interesting history about the Canal. We were able to walk through a lock on the 2nd edition of the Canal from the early 1900s. There was also a restored tavern and hotel onsite. The volunteers were full of knowledge. Pat has a thing for barns on this trip, and it has spilled over onto me...so lots of barn pics!Read more

  • Day 4

    Passage to Massachusetts

    September 26, 2023 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 61 °F

    Another drive day. The best thing about today was that we had all day to get to Massachusetts. It was a 6 hour drive that we did in about 8-1/2.

    Time together, a random stop, music, roadside lunch, holding hands and no hurry.

    Not as many farms on this leg but some beautiful scenery just the same. The drive took us through the valley of a couple of moutian ranges. We learned a little something about the Erie Canal.

    Quirk of the day: Once we exited the interstate, in order to get to the camping area, we had to take 6 lefts, a right and another left. That much left just twitched Amy's brain - but she survived.

    Tomorrow, we start with fresh apple cider donuts.
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  • Day 5

    Apple Cider Doughnuts

    September 27, 2023 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 46 °F

    It's not even 9am, and it's a great day already. Amy found a review on a cafe that featured homemade apple cider doughnuts. It was a must do.

    Homerun!!

    The doughnuts were great, but this wasn't a cafe as much as it was a farm store full of house made goodies.

    This place is situated on an apple orchid. They make breads and dried fruits and vegetables, cut meats, and bake cookies and pastries. It is a cafe, and the local gathering shop on a corner in farm country.

    We "tourist shopped" filled a shopping cart with "cottage bacon" veggies, baked goods (molasses cookies), and such. Okay, we "silly shopped," but it was fun.

    Amy got her doughnuts, and I had a breakfast sandwich we we chatted with some fabulous New Englanders ... and we have only just begun.
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  • Day 5

    First Lobster Roll ever!

    September 27, 2023 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 64 °F

    We crossed the state line into Maine and headed for the coast to Wells Beach. Home of some very highly rated lobster rolls! We were excited to see what all the fuss was about. The clam Chowder was delicious! The lobster rolls were good, but I've had one now. I'm good. We ate outside with a beautiful view of the ocean. The people were friendly and talkative.Read more

  • Day 6

    Day 1 in Acadia

    September 28, 2023 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 61 °F

    Today's first thing was supposed to be a bike ride, but instead, X-rays seemed like a better idea. Fortunately, there are no broken bones. Amy is a tough lady. We made the best of the day. We got her a wrist brace and headed to the park.

    A quick stop at the visitors center and then off to adventure on foot - well, mostly by truck with short walks to the cliffs and overlooks.

    But with camera in hand, off she went. I missed a turn, and so we got diverted to a spot that made me say, "This is better than Hawaii." We sat on a granite cliffside, taking it all in. Ocean, islands, lobster bouys, waves breaking, a diving loon, the smell of the sea. Gorgeous.

    We saw several ocean views and lake views, and it was spectacular. I'm terribly impressed.

    What we did today was all the easy views. Tomorrow, a little more more. A little more adventure.
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  • Day 6

    Smuggler's Den, Acadia Maine

    September 28, 2023 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 55 °F

    It was a long drive today. We were both tired and ready to relax. My man backed into our spot like a champ in the near dark....turned the leveler on and it was perfect! That never happens! Woo hoo! I always help with the stabilizer jacks. This time however the jack was stuck and when I hit the drill it spun my hand around. It was not pleasant. It is swollen and black and blue and hurts... spoiler alert...went to an ER clinic next morning (NOT how we wanted to spend our morning) xrays show no broken bones...just a bad sprain. I'm now in a wrist brace.Read more

  • Day 7

    The Bike Map

    September 29, 2023 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 54 °F

    A funny thing. This is not picking on My Lovely. This is loving everything about her.

    We did 25 miles on the bikes today. There were lots of turns. It would not have been difficult to miss a turn and do loops. But My Lovely was on top of it. She had her map and was prepared.

    Amy seemed intent on showing me where we were and where we were going.

    --- Honestly, I just follow her wherever she goes, and I am happy to be wherever she is. But of course, she is right. We got to see the best of the park. ---

    Anyway, she seems intent on showing me the map. The paper map. Several times, she tried to zoom in on the map by picking her fingers together and expanding them. And then she would laugh at herself. I just stood there with a goofy look on my face, thinking how adorable she is. I love her, and I love living life with her.
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  • Day 7

    The Sun that did not Rise.

    September 29, 2023 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 52 °F

    We began the day with sunrise on the cliffs, but it was hazy and overcast.

    There was no sun to be seen. No magic feeling as the day breaks over the horizon.

    The gulls were out as the day dawned and the lobster boats labored to finish their daily chore. The bell clanged on the bouy while we enjoyed our coffee and doughnut.

    We got up earlier to see something that did not happen. Life is not everything you want. Sometimes life is enjoying what there is to enjoy.

    Today, I got to enjoy coffee, doughnuts and anticipation with my Birthday Girl.
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  • Day 7

    Acadia's Carriage Roads

    September 29, 2023 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 55 °F

    Thanks for the question, mom!

    Travel With The Landscape

    Forty-five miles of rustic carriage roads, the gift of philanthropist John D. Rockefeller Jr. and family, weave around the mountains and valleys of Acadia National Park. Rockefeller, a skilled horseman, wanted to travel on motor-free byways via horse and carriage into the heart of Mount Desert Island. His construction efforts from 1913 to 1940 resulted in roads with sweeping vistas and close-up views of the landscape.

    The roads were built to preserve the line of hillsides and save trees, align with the contours of the lands, and take advantage of scenic views. Approximately 16 feet wide, the carriage roads are an example of broken-stone roads commonly used at the turn of the 20th century. Gate lodges act as impressive welcomes to the carriage road system, stone-faced bridges span streams, waterfalls, motor roads, and cliff sides. Granite coping stones used as guardrails line the roads, affectionately called "Rockefeller's teeth."

    Today, carriage roads have multiple-user groups as they did in the past. Pedestrians, bicyclists, and horse-drawn carriages share in the beauty, access, and safety of these auto-free roads across the park. Certain roads are extremely popular, so exercise courtesy and caution, and avoid surprise encounters.

    State-of-the-Art Roads

    Acadia’s carriage roads are the best example of broken-stone roads—a type of road commonly used at the turn of the 20th century—in America today. They are true roads, approximately 16 feet wide, constructed with methods that required much hand labor.

    The roads were engineered to contend with Maine’s wet weather. Stone culverts, wide ditches, three layers of rock, and a substantial six- to eight-inch crown ensured good drainage. Rather than flattening hillsides to accommodate the roads, breast walls and retaining walls were built to preserve the line of hillsides and save trees. Rockefeller, naturally gifted with the eye of a landscape architect, aligned the roads to follow the contours of the land and to take advantage of scenic views. He graded the roads so they were not too steep or too sharply curved for horse-drawn carriages.

    Road crews quarried island granite for road material and bridge facing. Roadsides were landscaped with native vegetation such as blueberries and sweet fern. The use of native materials helped blend the roads into the natural landscape.

    An Integrated System

    Rockefeller participated in the construction process. He walked areas staked out for road alignment and observed work in progress. He knew the laborers by name and used experts to design the bridges and engineer the roads. Throughout it all, he paid rapt attention to the most minute details, from the placement of coping stones to the cost of a running foot of road.

    Following are some elements that unify the carriage road system:

    Coping Stones
    Large blocks of granite lining the roads serve as guardrails. Cut roughly and spaced irregularly, the coping stones create a rustic appearance. These coping stones have been affectionately called “Rockefeller’s teeth.”

    Signposts
    Cedar signposts were installed at intersections to direct carriage drivers. The posts were stained with Cabots shingle stain #248. The lettering was painted first with one coat of flat yellow paint, then with another coat of enamel yellow. Today, numbers that match maps and guidebooks are attached to the signposts and help carriage road users find their way.

    Roadside Grooming and Landscaping
    Rockefeller employed a crew of foresters to remove debris from the roads and roadsides. Nationally known landscape architect Beatrix Farrand consulted on planting designs to frame vistas and bridges and to heal scars left behind by carriage road construction. The Fire of 1947 destroyed much of her work.

    Gate Lodges
    Two gate lodges, one at Jordan Pond and the other near Northeast Harbor, ornament the roads and serve as impressive welcomes to the system. A third gate lodge was planned at Eagle Lake, but was never built. During carriage road construction, engineer Paul Simpson and his family lived at the Jordan Pond Gate Lodge.

    Bridges
    Rockefeller financed 16 of 17 stone-faced bridges, each unique in design, to span streams, waterfalls, roads, and cliff sides. The bridges are steel-reinforced concrete, but the use of native stone for the facing gives them a natural appearance. Over time, the stone cutters grew very skilled and Rockefeller often requested them not to cut the facing too well lest the rustic look be lost.

    The result of Rockefeller’s vision and attention to detail is an integrated system of carriage roads that blends harmoniously with the landscape.

     
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