Category: Trip

Bangor

There’s a place just outside of Bangor called Bangor Forest that contains about a dozen miles of hiking trails. One of them leads to something quite special: the Orono Bog Boardwalk.

This is a floating one-mile boardwalk through a peat bog! It starts in dense swampy forest – the ground here is very wet with lots of standing water – and after a few hundred feet emerges into a very different type of landscape.

This is the peat bog, where only very hardy plants can survive and the ground is covered in moss. To our great surprise one of the more common plants here is the carnivorous pitcher plant, and the ground was covered in them:

It takes about an hour to walk the entire boardwalk, and despite not seeing any of the animals mentioned on the information boards – such as snowshoe rabbits, cougars or leopard frogs! – we found the experience fascinating and even spent about 15 (unsuccessful) minutes trying to spot a sundew plant πŸ™‚

Afterwards we went to a ‘museum of land transportation’, which was a giant warehouse filled with an insanely large collection of vehicles and paraphernalia from the last 120 or so years of American life. From roller skates to trains, this place had it all.

You could spend days here reading all the info sheets just for the vehicles alone, but the museum has so much more including rooms of WW2 artifacts and an encyclopedic history of road shipping in Maine. It’s the work of one man (who owned a trucking company) and is one of the most impressive private museums I’ve ever visited.

Shortly after we left it started raining, which was somewhat appropriate since we then (after a visit to a casino where I won $23!) went to visit Stephen King!

Yes that’s his home, but no he no longer lives there. As Bangor’s most famous resident his house has become a tourist attraction, and while it’s gated and doesn’t do tours, there’s an endless stream of people stopping briefly for a quick photo. One lady we saw yesterday had a red balloon with her as well, an obvious nod to King’s novel It πŸ™‚

I write this from our final destination on this trip… but you’ll have to wait for the next post to see where that is!

Portland

To break up the drive north, we spent a night in Portland. On the way we stopped at New Hampshire’s beach resort Hampton Beach, which was way better than we expected.

We spent a few hours there in the boardwalk shops and arcades before continuing on to our Portland hotel. The rest of the day was shopping (including in a great comic shop) and lazing around like sloths.

The next morning we visited two lighthouses. The first was the over-200-year-old Portland Head Light, which was breathtaking!

The area around the park is now parkland, and has a lovely cliff walk that provides great views of the lighthouse (which is still functioning) from several angles.

It was a beautiful morning and the sound of the waves on the rocks was occasionally broken by a bell from a buoy or the engine noise of a fishing boat going out for the day. Standing on the cliff and looking out over the water was mesmerizing.

Next we drove a few miles north to a second (active) lighthouse built at the end of a jetty like the one I crossed in Provincetown.

Once again KLS waited on the shore (these rocks weren’t trivial to negotiate) and I sprinted out for a close look.

It was bigger than expected and seemed to be occupied! It was also well fortified with trapdoors limited access and preventing trespassing – probably a good thing since it’s built right next to a university campus!

While quite different, both of these lighthouses were great to see especially up close! If you’re ever traveling and have a chance to visit a lighthouse, I recommend it!

The other thing we did today was visited a fort in the Maine capital of Augusta. We took an excellent guided tour that covered the history of the fort as well as what life in those days (>200 years ago) was like. It was definitely worth the stop. Unfortunately I didn’t take a single photo so the one above I borrowed from the internet πŸ™‚

Oh yes we’re in Maine, which is famous for moose. We’ve seen signs warning of them, but haven’t seen any yet. The closest we’ve got was this life-sized statue at a rest stop:

Imagine running into one of them in the wild!!

Salem

On the way to Salem we stopped at Plymouth to visit a reproduction of The Mayflower and see the famous Plymouth Rock.

Both were worth the trip! Afterwards we ate fish’n’chips on the wharf and then walked out into the jetty you can see in the background of the above photo.

Kids were ‘fishing’ for crabs from the bridge, and we watched them lower nets down and pull up crabs almost immediately! It was quite extraordinary to see, and I imagined how much I would have loved doing something like that as a kid. (The crabs were smallish, and they release them all when they’re done.)

After our stop in Plymouth we drove to Salem, our second major destination.

Salem is one of the most unique places I’ve ever visited. While it has a rich history – only a small part of which involves witches – the tourist industry has become a quirky blend of witches and horror movies and magic. There’s dozens of shops and attractions crammed into only a few blocks selling all sorts of ‘witchy’ souvenirs or offering magical experiences. The town has embraced witches 110%, and that’s why the tourists are here πŸ™‚

We of course partook, and bought some insane stuff. I also found an amazing comic/collectibles shop and we stumbled upon an extraordinary artist in his studio and bought a framed print of an octopus directly from him!

Oh and I had a Pluto Pup. Or a Dagwood Dog. Or a Corndog. Whatever you call it, it was fantastic:

And KLS had these:

The macaroon flavours were earl grey tea, lavender, rose, chocolate, lemon and birthday cakes! The other thing was chocolate mouse with a thin crunchy center and a mirror glaze. She said it was all fabulous πŸ™‚

Salem was great and weird and well worth the trip (and I didn’t even mention the tourist trolley or the wax museum we did), but it’s now time to continue our road trip. Where will be going next…?