Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Maine, Acadia National Park, Must Get Rocks!

New England Trip, Day 7, 8, 9, 10

Our final stop of the trip was the crown jewel of the north Atlantic coast, Acadia National Park.  We booked the most interesting accommodations of trip too -- an ocean-side B&B and organic farm of sorts.  The website spoke of a retired couple growing their own food, making cheese from their goats' milk and raising free-range chickens -- this could be pretty cool.  After a long drive from New Hampshire, the wife greeted us and led us to the upstairs room.  It was small with a beautiful view and neatly decorated with lace covered end tables and flowered pillow shams -- just like the picture.  By the time we unpacked, showered and crawled in to bed, the place was completely trashed.  Funny how that happens.

At breakfast we expected an organic feast, but the meal, while nice, was standard fare.  Again, the wife served our breakfast and engaged in some casual conversation.  I found the conversation somewhat off-putting as she interrupted me several times in a rather dismissive way.  She also complained about her farm chores, feeding the chickens and the long walk to the goat barn.  This was not at all what I expected.  I felt like saying, "Hey, you can talk to your husband like that, but your should be more polite to your guests."


After half-hour drive, we arrived at the Hulls Cove Visitor's Center.  After a look-see at the visitor's center, we unloaded the bikes and rode out on the park's carriage roads.

The construction of Acadia's carriage roads were financed and directed by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., an experienced horseman who wanted to travel by horse and carriage without annoying motor cars. Between 1913 and 1940, he built 45 miles of carriage roads within the park leaving a wonderful legacy to the bike riders of today.  The crushed native stone and well-graded trails make for very nice biking.

We rode to Jordan Pond with a stop at Conner's Nubble for lunch.  The weather was cloudy, but mild -- another bike ride win!

Acadia!

Acadia Nation Park's carriage roads

For lunch, we parked the bikes and hiked out to Conners Nubble.  Nearby are two peaks: South Bubble and North Bubble -- gotta love the Acadia's place names.

Conners Nubble overlooking Eagle Lake




Alternating bites of apple and granola bar make a delicious snack





I had been waiting until Maine to have lobster, so when we saw this quirky restaurant on the way back from Acadia, we knew we had to eat here.  They did not disappoint, it was definitely quirky and they definitely served lobster.

Perfect spot for dinner

Seafood platter

For our second breakfast at the B&B, we were joined by another couple which made for a better conversion.  The husband was particularly quick-witted and funny.  The B&B owner joined in and shared that her husband had died several years ago.  The B&B/organic farm was his idea and she still hadn't gotten around to updating the website.  A retirement dream that ended too soon.  It seemed really sad.  Boy, was I glad I hadn't made the snarky husband comment the day before.

After days of beautiful fall conditions, our luck with the weather finally ran out.  It was raining and the forecast was nasty until late afternoon.  Time to break out the rain gear.  A trail ran from the B&B to a local park.  We checked out the B&B's goat shed, and then hiked to Tidal Falls Nature Preserve which overlooks a narrows in Frenchman Bay and features whitewater that reverses with the tides.  

Our one day of bad weather

The park also features a small visitor's center and some sculptures.

"Honey, if I collect the rocks, maybe you could build me one of these?" Mona suggested as she contemplated one of the park's sculptures.

"Could you build this for me?"

Collect rocks?  What can I say about Mona's collecting?  What first springs to mind is Lucille Ball who's character in the movie "The Long, Long Trailer" hid her immense rock collection in the trailer while Desi navigated a cliffhanging route through the mountains.  Like Lucy, Mona can't resist a souvenir rock.  During our hike along the Rhode Island's Cliff Walk, I scrambled down a steep embankment to the water.  I called to Mona to follow and she declined until I mentioned, "There are some rocks down here."  Next thing I know, she's down the embankment and scouring the shore for interesting rocks.

Must get rocks!

But a better comparison is the activities of one 18th-century European polymath, Alexander von Humboldt.  Humboldt travelled extensively through Central and South America documenting his explorations with a scientific view and collecting everything he could.  At one point, Humboldt almost drowned crossing a Venezuelan river because he overloaded his canoe with rocks, seeds, plants and even live animals.

Like Humboldt, Mona collects everything: rocks, shells, leaves, drift wood.  She's smuggled giant seeds from Costa Rica and cork bark from Andalusia.  The seeds were the size of ping pong balls.  Mona displayed them in a decorative bowl.  Several months later, she heard a lot popping sound and discovered the seeds had burse open -- releasing who knows what into our house.

After that, I was a little more circumspect about bringing home biological agents from foreign lands.  On a bicycle ride to Grazalema, Spain, we found ourselves in a forest of cork trees.  The bark of the cork tree is harvested every nine years leaving the trunk of the tree looking much like a freshly shaved poodle.  The bark is thick and spongy and, of course, Mona collected some samples.

"You know, the Emerald Ash Borer was introduced to the US via the bark of shipping pallets." I cautioned Mona.  "We could get in real trouble bringing that cork bark home."

"Oh, you're such a goodie-two-shoes.  Take some chances in life!" she replied as she hid the cork in her luggage.  There was no reasoning with her.  I did quarantine the bark in a plastic container until I could seal it with polyurethane.  It looks very nice displayed next to the burst Costa Rican seeds in a large bowl on our dining room table.  

What does this women have in her pockets?

The bowl holds an interesting collection: a dozen perfect Sand Dollars from San Vincent Island, an alligator's tooth from Wakulla Springs, a 1.7 billion year-old piece of Vishnu Schist granite from the North Kaibab Trail that tried to kill me, an Orioles' nest, the claw of a Great Horned Owl.  Each item has a story and if you bring some wine, we'll tell you all about it.

Not everything gets displayed.  Our kids followed Mona's example in collecting treasure. When each vacation resulted in an additional box of shells, rocks, drift wood and even baggies of beach sand, we needed to make some compromises.  The compromise was to dump the excess outside, along the foundation of our house.  No need to go to Florida, you can beach comb right outside our front door.

Sometimes I have taken stricter measures to curtail the collecting.  When the kids were little they would hand me "a treasure" to bring home every 100 yards.  My technique was to dump the stuff temporarily behind a trail marker or some other easily remembered landmark.  If the kids remembered and asked, I'd go back and get it.  If they didn't remember, which was usually the case, it stayed there to be found by the next lucky treasure seeker.  "Oh look, a stick!"  Even with my precautions, I still occasionally find my pack a little heavier at the end of the hike. "How did these rocks get in my side pockets?"  
L-u-u-c-y!

---


Schoodic Peninsula

After our hike near the B&B, we drove to Acadia's Schoodic Peninsula.  Not as dramatic as the main part of the park on Mount Desert Island, the drive around Schoonic Peninsula offers nice views of the water and access to some easy hiking.  By the time we circled the park, the rain had stopped and we enjoyed a very nice picnic dinner at Frazier Point.

Sunset at Frazier Point, Schoodic Peninsula

The next and last day at Acadia was cool, clear and breezy.  A good day for hiking.  My niece Emily had posted a recommendation to my Instagram account, "Do the Precipice trail.  It's my favorite trail ever!"  Based on the trail's name and the fact that the recommendation came from someone who convinced her father to build a trapeze in the back yard so she could train to become a circus performer, I carefully read the trail descriptions before committing to a route.

You've been warned

The trail descriptions included the phrases "exposed cliffs that require climbing on iron rungs" and "serious injury and death."  Hey, this could be fun.  In order to dial it back a notch, I suggested we hike/climb the Beehive Trail which seemed to be a slightly easier version of the Precipice Trail.


The moment Mona realized she might die

I was very explicit with Mona about the route and she was game until we got to the second set of rungs and she realized that "serious injury and death" was not an exaggeration.  

"It's too late to turn back," I told her.  "It's more dangerous to climb down than up.  We must go up.  From the top, there's an easier route back down."  With that, Mona stiffened her resolve and climbed on. 

But didn't

The scary part didn't last too long and quicker than you can say "acrophobia" we were having lunch looking out over the Atlantic Ocean.



On our return home, I drilled holes in Mona's Acadia rocks and mounted them on a steel stand in the garden.  Not quite the same as the sculpture in Maine, but I'm calling it a win.

Acadia-sourced rocks, an artisan stand, $24 in masonry drill bits and 2 hours of drilling.

'Nuff said.


Biking route at Acadia N. P.


Six states, ten days, twenty miles hiked, one hundred miles biked.  Great trip.

State:Maine
Date:2019-10-22
Route:Hulls Cove Visitor Center to Jordan Pond House
Distance:18 miles

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