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Maine - 80 Great Things to Do in Maine

Acadia/Bar Harbor/Down East Aroostook Augusta/Kennebec Greater Portland & Casco Bay
Maine Highlands Mid Coast South Coast Western Lakes/Mountains

10 Great Things to Do in Mid Coast Maine

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ACADIA/BAR HARBOR/DOWN EAST    top of listings

Cheap Treats for the Body, Inside and Out  Cheap Treats for the Body, Inside and Out

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If you are traveling internationally, you may buy items without having to pay either the sales tax (called value added tax) or the customs duties assessed by the United States – primarily on liquor and tobacco but also with many other products. The savings from duty-free shopping can be significant. At Duty Free Americas in Calais (40 Main Street), and in Vanceboro (119 Water Street), shoppers can find discounted prices on premium spirits, wine, beer and tobacco as well as designer fragrances, cosmetics, fashion watches, crystal, jewelry, leather goods, gifts for children, and more. Currency exchange is available. Phone: Calais store at 207-454-3476 or 207-454-3404; Vanceboro store at 207-788-3989.



Clocks, with Labradors on the Side  Clocks, with Labradors on the Side

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Once upon a time in the far off enchanted land of Bar Harbor there lived a clockmaker known all over the land for his expertise and knowledge of the intricate workings of clocks, watches and barometers. Gentlefolk who lived too far away to visit his charming place of business, shipped their broken but beloved time pieces from all over the world for the clockmaker to work his magic and return these treasures to a state of precise timekeeping. This clockmaker goes by the name of Alexander H. Phillips and his place of business is 110 Main Street. You can visit him there from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays to learn of his history and talents and to see a sample of his wares. (the store is also home and guest petting parlor to Finn and Whiskey, a yellow and a chocolate Lab.) Phone: 207-288-3684.



Rocky Shores, Craggy Mountains  Rocky Shores, Craggy Mountains

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With all due respect, the ultimate expression of Down East Maine’s beauty has to be Acadia National Park in Bar Harbor, a must-see place whether you live just down the road or in southern Texas. Among the park’s offerings is the 27-mile Park Loop Road system, offers outstanding views of the park's ocean shoreline, coastal forests, and mountain silhouettes. It’s all in front of you; just putter along and try to blink occasionally. Phone: 207-288-3338



We’ll Keep the Light On  We’ll Keep the Light On

With its jagged and rocky coastline, Maine in the runaway leader as the New England state of abundant lighthouses. West Quoddy Head Light, in West Quoddy State Park in Lubec, has the additional appeal of offering a visitor center and museum. And the Isle au Haut Light in the town of the same name is among a small handful of New England lighthouses that operate a bed-and-breakfast in the keeper’s house. That’s our idea of romance.



Wooden Artwork Makes Personal Keepsakes  Wooden Artwork Makes Personal Keepsakes

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A beautiful and unusual shop in the town of Eastport is Wood on Water, which specializes in wood-burned and hand-painted giftware and furnishings. Woodburning is the art of using an electric pen to etch designs into wood and other natural materials. Once the image is burned onto the wood, color may be added. Customers of Wood on Water may order gifts with customized images and designs. Some popular choices include keepsake boxes, treasure chests, and lap desks, custom chair rails, baseboards, wildlife scenes, and local or antique maps. Perhaps you have an image of your pet, a favorite flower, or a family symbol. This is the place for unique and personal gifts. Phone: 207-853-WOOD.



AROOSTOOK    top of listings

All the Routes for All the Snowmobiles  All the Routes for All the Snowmobiles

To say the snowmobile trails in Maine are some of the finest in the country would be an understatement at best. Maine’s Interconnected Trail System (ITS) is provided to snowmobilers through the joint effort of the Maine Snowmobile Association, headquartered in Augusta, and the Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands, Department of Conservation. You can get a detailed map of the Interconnected Trail System by contacting the Maine Snowmobile Association at PO Box 80, Augusta, 04332. Phone: 207-622-6983



Cozy Cabin Adjacent to All the Snow Sports  Cozy Cabin Adjacent to All the Snow Sports

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If you want to get outdoors, even in the cold season, and also need a nearby, warm, and cozy retreat, get in touch with Cochran Camps on Cochran Lake in New Limerick, 10 miles east of Houlton. A rental cabin on the lake sleeps six people and has a full bath, kitchen, and essential appliances. Outdoors, you will find groomed snowmobile trails, cross country skiing, and hiking. For evenings, it is just a short drive to a movie theater or shopping in downtown Houlton. Phone: 207-532-7336



French Twist on Maine History  French Twist on Maine History

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French Acadians settled in Madawaska in 1785 after being forced to flee Canada. Most Madawaska residents are of Acadian descent, and French is still spoken here. The simple and beautiful Tanta Blanche Museum in Madawaskahonors Marguerite Blanche Thibodeau, who, during the desperate winter of 1796 worked to keep the colony from extinction by distributing food and clothes and medical care.



From Wines to Watches, All the Prices Are Fine  From Wines to Watches, All the Prices Are Fine

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If you are traveling internationally, you may buy items without having to pay either the sales tax (called value added tax) or the customs duties assessed by the United States – primarily on liquor and tobacco but also with many other products. The savings from duty-free shopping can be significant. At Duty Free Americas in Houlton at 4 Airport Road, and in Van Buren at 122 Bridge Street, shoppers can find discounted prices on premium spirits, wine, beer and tobacco as well as designer fragrances, cosmetics, fashion watches, crystal, jewelry, leather goods, gifts for children, and more. Currency exchange is available. Phone: Houlton store at 207-532 – 6540.



Hooked Rugs, Folk Art, and More  Hooked Rugs, Folk Art, and More

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For many antique hunters, the exploration begins after entering the shop. A visit to Les Dumond Antiques in Madawaska, near the Canadian border, is an exploration into the northern woods simply to arrive there. Be sure to phone ahead – the shop is open odd hours. When you do, you will be rewarded by county furniture, small primitives, folk art, hooked rugs, game boards, advertising, porch, garden and camp furniture. An exploration within an expedition. Phone: 207-728-7004.



Saturn Is Our Favorite  Saturn Is Our Favorite

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Ok, it’s not big compared to the solar system, but it is big for a model of the solar system. The three-dimensional Maine Solar System Model stretches for 40 miles along U.S. Route 1 from Houlton to the University of Maine at Presque Isle. The model includes the Sun and nine planets, and all but Pluto are visible from Route 1. Keep kids busy in the car the old-fashioned way: Make them compete to find and name our space neighbors.



Wilderness and More Wilderness  Wilderness and More Wilderness

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Aroostook State Park in Presque Isle, which includes Quaggy Jo Mountain and Echo Lake, is the ideal starting point for discovering the North Maine Woods and the Allagash Wilderness Waterway. Echo Lake is stocked with brook trout and public boat access is available. Canoe and paddleboat rentals are available. Campsites and a guarded beach are opening the warm weather. Cross-country ski trails and snowmobile trails are plentiful in winter. Phone: 207-768-8341



Wildflowers Below; Eagles Above  Wildflowers Below; Eagles Above

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The northernmost of Maine's scenic byways, State Route 11 follows the rolling hills between Portage and Fort Kent. Outstanding views of wildflower meadows, Eagle Lake, and Mount Katahdin. Much of the 37-mile route is forested, so glimpses of eagles and moose are likely. Route 11 connects Aroostook County and New Brunswick, Canada, and the people here are proud of the strong Acadian influence on their cultural traditions.



AUGUSTA/KENNEBEC    top of listings

All the Routes for All the Snowmobiles  All the Routes for All the Snowmobiles

To say the snowmobile trails in Maine are some of the finest in the country would be an understatement at best. Maine’s Interconnected Trail System (ITS) is provided to snowmobilers through the joint effort of the Maine Snowmobile Association, headquartered in Augusta, and the Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands, Department of Conservation. You can get a detailed map of the Interconnected Trail System by contacting the Maine Snowmobile Association at PO Box 80, Augusta, 04332. Phone: 207-622-6983



Did We Mention the Majolica?  Did We Mention the Majolica?

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Imagine this: 20,000 square feet of (carpeted!) display area. That’s part of the description for Fairfield Antiques Mall, on Route 201 in Fairfield,the largest group of antique shops in Maine. More than 100 antiques dealers are parked in this crossroads of Maine, offering a huge inventory of Victorian, oak, country, mission, and wicker furniture; glassware; frames, mirrors and clocks; hoosiers and iceboxes; jewelry, watches, and coins. But why even try to list the highlights? The mall has three huge storewide sales every year, in January, April, and November, so check back often for dates and details. Open daily, year-round. Phone: 207-453-4100.



Everyone Loves the Lower Prices  Everyone Loves the Lower Prices

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If you are traveling internationally, you may buy items without having to pay either the sales tax (called value added tax) or the customs duties assessed by the United States – primarily on liquor and tobacco but also with many other products. The savings from duty-free shopping can be significant. At Duty Free Americas in Jackman (2621 Route 201 North), shoppers can find discounted prices on premium spirits, wine, beer and tobacco as well as designer fragrances, cosmetics, fashion watches, crystal, jewelry, leather goods, gifts for children, and more. Currency exchange is available. Phone: 207-668-7738.



Murals and Frescoes on Every Side  Murals and Frescoes on Every Side

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From outside, the South Solon Meeting House looks like many in New England. Inside, the 1842 Greek Revival building on south Main Street in Solonis unlike any other. It was restored in 1939 and during the 1950s students and faculty of the nearby Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture decorated every inch the interior walls and ceiling with fresco murals showing contemporary images from the Bible and the founders of the meeting house. The structure is open to visitors while it undergoes renovations. Just unlatch the front door (it's never been locked) and step inside to photograph the colorful scenes or reflect in solitude. Phone: 207-643-2541 or 207-643-2812



Trail to 53,000 Works of Art  Trail to 53,000 Works of Art

The Maine Art Museum Trail offers more than 53,000 works of art, from ancient to contemporary, in a dazzling array of collections at seven leading art museums. Museums on the trail include Bates College Museum of Art (Lewiston), Bowdoin College Museum of Art (Brunswick), Colby College Museum of Art (Waterville), Farnsworth Art Museum (Rockland), Ogunquit Museum of American Art (Ogunquit), Portland Museum of Art (Portland), and University of Maine Museum of Art (Bangor). The museums’ permanent collections include works of art by the many artists who have vacationed or worked in Maine. They also feature masterpieces by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Edgar Degas, Mary Cassatt, and Pablo Picasso, Greek and Roman sculpture, early American silver and furniture, and contemporary textiles, prints, ceramics, and sculpture. Some museums also offer free admission during selected hours.



Watercolors of Maine  Watercolors of Maine

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Among its offerings, the Colby College Museum of Art on Mayflower Hill Drive in Waterville has a permanent collection focused on American art. The Lunder Wing of the museum offers 200 American works, including paintings by John Marin, an early modernist artist best known for his watercolors of coastal Maine and urban scenes of New York. Maine settings that Marin depicted include Small Point Harbor, Deer Isle and Stonington on Penobscot Bay, Cape Split and South Addison. Open year-round. Admission is free. Phone: 207-859-5600.



Where the Trees Hang Out  Where the Trees Hang Out

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Calling itself “Maine’s Living Museum of Trees,” the Pine Tree State Arboretum on Hospital Street in Augusta is a paradise for nature lovers. It contains 300 species of trees and shrubs; a five-mile trail system open year-round to hiking, jogging, bird watching, biking, horseback riding, and cross-country skiing on groomed winter trails; picnic areas; and bird-watching opportunities. Trail maps are available at the arboretum. This place is serenely beautiful in all seasons. Phone: 207-621-0031



GREATER PORTLAND & CASCO BAY    top of listings

All Together Now  All Together Now

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People who love to sing in harmony gather every Sunday afternoon year-round at the New Church on Stevens Avenue in Portland to sing hymns and anthems from the Sacred Harp. Shape Note Music , which a reviewer once called America’s best-kept musical secret, is part of aN American tradition that was brought to the attention of the general public in the movie “Cold Mountain”. Sacred Harp is enjoying a revival nationwide. This is not a performance; it is an afternoon of singing just for the enjoyment of participants. Show up any time between 1 and 4 p.m. and pick up a songbook. Phone: 207-985-7002.



Bradbury Beckons with Fabulous Views  Bradbury Beckons with Fabulous Views

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Bradbury Mountain State Park, on Route 9 in Pownal about halfway between Portland and Lewiston/Auburn, features panoramic views from the top of Bradbury Mountain and nearly 1,000 acres of forested land to explore. The trails are a primary attraction, especially the short hike to the summit of Bradbury Mountain (easy enough for youngsters). From the summit, 485 feet above sea level, hikers and bikers have a great view of Casco Bay. Mountain bikers and horseback riders also use many of the park’s trails, as do cross-country skiers, snowshoers, and snowmobiles in the winter. Picnickers enjoy the tables, grills, and shelter with a nearby playground and ball field. Campers can make a day trip to nearby beaches at Reid and Popham Beach State Parks, or shopping trips to Freeport (just 10 minutes away). Phone: 207-688-4712.



International Crypotozoology Museum  International Crypotozoology Museum

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Cyrptozoology? What is that, you might ask. The short answer is “the study of hidden animals,” and the longer answer can be found at the new International Museum of Crypotozoology , opened November 1, 2009, on Congress Street, in the Portland Arts District, just down the street from the Portland Museum of Art, the Children's Museum, and the State Theater, and right across from The Fun Box Monster Emporium. The centerpiece of the collection is the once-elusive, eight- foot-tall, 400-pound "Crookston Bigfoot," created by Wisconsin artist Curtis Christensen. Special drawings, bronzes, paintings, and sculpture creations by the world's leading cryptozoology artists are featured in the collection. The museum also includes exhibits on the discoveries of "living fossils," the successful cryptozoological stories. Zoologists, why are you still reading this?



That’s a Seriously Big Globe  That’s a Seriously Big Globe

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Astronomers: you need to make a visit to planet Eartha , a 3-dimensional scale model of Earth that rotates and revolves, representing Earth as it is seen from space. Housed in a three-story glass atrium at the headquarters The DeLorme Mapping Company in Yarmouth, Eartha is 41.5 feet in diameter. Every continent is beautifully detailed, with vivid colors illustrating all levels of vegetation. Ocean depths are also completely represented. Open daily, 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed New Years, Easter, Thanksgiving, Christmas. Phone: 800-642-0970



Trail to 53,000 Works of Art  Trail to 53,000 Works of Art

Trail to 53,000 Works of Art The Maine Art Museum Trail offers more than 53,000 works of art, from ancient to contemporary, in a dazzling array of collections at seven leading art museums. Museums on the trail include Bates College Museum of Art (Lewiston), Bowdoin College Museum of Art (Brunswick), Colby College Museum of Art (Waterville), Farnsworth Art Museum (Rockland), Ogunquit Museum of American Art (Ogunquit), Portland Museum of Art (Portland), and University of Maine Museum of Art (Bangor). The museums’ permanent collections include works of art by the many artists who have vacationed or worked in Maine. They also feature masterpieces by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Edgar Degas, Mary Cassatt, and Pablo Picasso, Greek and Roman sculpture, early American silver and furniture, and contemporary textiles, prints, ceramics, and sculpture. Some museums also offer free admission during selected hours.



Traipsing Around the Island  Traipsing Around the Island

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For a wonderful walk and stunning views of Casco Bay and Portland, take the causeway from Falmouth at the mouth of the Presumpscot River to Mackworth Island . The one-mile trail that encircles the island takes about an hour to complete and the views are gorgeous. Along the way, stop to watch boats and ferries motor though the Atlantic waters while seagulls, osprey, and shorebirds glide overhead. Open year-round. Phone: 207-624-6076



MAINE HIGHLANDS    top of listings

A Mushing Adventure on the Dog Sled Trail  A Mushing Adventure on the Dog Sled Trail

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Morning Crescent Sled Dogs, a kennel on Patte Brook Road in Albany Township, near the town of Bethel, wants to show you the fun and adventure of dogsledding. The company offers rides and instruction for people of all ages and abilities. The half-day tour is an introduction to dogsledding that includes basic instruction and time on the trail totaling about three hours. The full-day tour allows more hands-on teaching and more time on the trail (about five or six hours) learning the art, skill and magic that is dogsledding. Phone: 207-824-7292.



Adventure for Four Days, Via Dogsled  Adventure for Four Days, Via Dogsled

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A business called Maine Dogsledding Adventures in Millinocket stands ready to offer you a four-day adventure driving a dogsled in the northern Maine woods. Trip members lodge in Millinocket the night before the morning rendezvous at the trailhead, when guests are then transported by snowmobile eight miles to camp, where they settle into private cabins. After lunch, the afternoon is spent learning the basics of harnessing, hooking up, and driving your own team. The next two days are spent exploring the surrounding wilderness by dogsled. This is a hands-on dogsled trip for those interested in being fully involved in driving and managing their own 5 to 6-dog team. Are you ready for adventure? Phone: 207-731-8888.



All the Routes for All the Snowmobiles  All the Routes for All the Snowmobiles

To say the snowmobile trails in Maine are some of the finest in the country would be an understatement at best. Maine’s Interconnected Trail System (ITS) is provided to snowmobilers through the joint effort of the Maine Snowmobile Association, headquartered in Augusta, and the Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands, Department of Conservation. You can get a detailed map of the Interconnected Trail System by contacting the Maine Snowmobile Association at PO Box 80, Augusta, 04332. Phone: 207-622-6983



Art Deco Beauty Hosts Great Performances  Art Deco Beauty Hosts Great Performances

The Penobscot Theatre , located in the heart of downtown Bangor, started in 1973 and has been going strong ever since, particularly with its acquisition in 1997 of the Bangor Opera House on Main Street, an early example of Art Deco/Egyptian Revival architecture, built in 1920. The theater offers post-show discussions, student matinees and summer theater workshops. The 2010 season is packed with interesting offerings, including "Spunk," "Hedwig and the Angry Itch," "the Norther Writes New Play Festival," and "The Underpants." Phone: 207-947-6618.



Body Oils and Other Pleasures <br>From Maine Ingredients  Body Oils and Other Pleasures
From Maine Ingredients


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The retail storefront for the Maine Mountain Country Store is, not surprisingly, a log cabin located in downtown Greenville. The Company Store features handmade scented and beeswax candles, all-natural bath and body soaps, lotions, balms, facial products, and pet shampoo. All products are made in small batches with high-quality ingredients, including chamomile flowers grown in gardens on the property, organic vegetable oils, and beeswax from a local beekeeper. The shop is accented with a wonderful array of products to decorate the home, from lamps to drawer pulls. Open year-round. Retail store open Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Phone: 207-695-3926.



For an Up-Close View of the Forest  For an Up-Close View of the Forest

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Baxter State Park was designed primarily to be a hiking park with very limited vehicle use. The park has 200 miles of trails and it is home to the Katahdin massif and the Traveler Range. Favorite waterfalls include Katahdin Stream Falls, Big and Little Niagara Falls and the remote Green Falls. Two of the most significant streams are Nesowadnehunk Stream and Wassataquoik Stream. Many ponds provide excellent fishing in most cases and the chance to canoe with the scenic north woods as a backdrop. Phone: 207-723-5140



Let’s Take an Old-Fashioned Walk  Let’s Take an Old-Fashioned Walk

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Brownville’s Pleasant River Walk is a nature walk of nearly three miles connecting the Village and the Junction. The nature trail is carefully groomed, quite easy to walk and is a three to four foot wide trail. There are a number of bridges to carry you over the brooks along the way and many benches located at carefully chosen scenic spots overlooking the river. Phone: 207-965-2311



Trail to 53,000 Works of Art  Trail to 53,000 Works of Art

The Maine Art Museum Trail offers more than 53,000 works of art, from ancient to contemporary, in a dazzling array of collections at seven leading art museums. Museums on the trail include Bates College Museum of Art (Lewiston), Bowdoin College Museum of Art (Brunswick), Colby College Museum of Art (Waterville), Farnsworth Art Museum (Rockland), Ogunquit Museum of American Art (Ogunquit), Portland Museum of Art (Portland), and University of Maine Museum of Art (Bangor). The museums’ permanent collections include works of art by the many artists who have vacationed or worked in Maine. They also feature masterpieces by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Edgar Degas, Mary Cassatt, and Pablo Picasso, Greek and Roman sculpture, early American silver and furniture, and contemporary textiles, prints, ceramics, and sculpture. Some museums also offer free admission during selected hours.



MID COAST    top of listings

A Bowl Full of Snow  A Bowl Full of Snow

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The Camden Snow Bowl ski and winter sports area makes its home at the summit of 1300-foot Ragged Mountain on Barnestown Road in Camden. It claims to the only ski area in New England where skiers and boarders can look out over spectacular views of the Atlantic Ocean while whooshing down the trails. In addition to alpine skiing and snowboarding, winter activities at the Snow Bowl include snow tubing, ice skating, cross country skiing and snowshoeing, and a thrilling 400-foot toboggan chute. Phone: 207-236-3438.



A Garden for All Ages in All Seasons  A Garden for All Ages in All Seasons

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Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens is an oasis of beautiful trails and plants on Barters Island near Boothbay in midcoast Maine. Opened in June 2007, this botanical garden, open to the public year-round (!!) is a haven of stunning ornamental gardens and exceptional natural beauty, waterfalls, and incomparable stonework and sculpture. Miles of trails allow visitors to experience waterfront and woodlands that are quintessentially Maine. A new feature in June of 2009, is the Lerner Garden of the Five Senses. This exquisite garden of about an acre adjacent to the Visitor Center has many features that make its delights accessible to disabled people. Coming in 2010 is a new children’s garden, featuring themes derived from beloved children’s literature by authors with a Maine connection. Open daily, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., year-round. Phone: 207-633-4333.



Bath Is Home to Graceful, Historic Neighborhoods  Bath Is Home to Graceful, Historic Neighborhoods

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Alongside the Kennebec River, Bath is a small jewel of a city that embraces an old seafaring town. Bath welcomes visitors with tree-lined historic avenues graced by handsome mansions that were once home to shipyard owners and ship captains. You can take a guided walking tour of the Bath historic district or ride the Bath Trolley around the scenic streets. Bath’s Front Street is home to antique stores, specialty shops, galleries and many fine restaurants. The summer concert series takes place on Friday evenings at Patten Free Library, and every third Friday from June to October there is an Art Walk from 5 to 7 p.m. Phone: 207-442-7291.



Beads, Buttons, and Bows to the Ceiling  Beads, Buttons, and Bows to the Ceiling

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People who rely on buttons and beads and related goods to express their artistic creativity need to make their way to the Beadin’ Path on Main Street in Freeport. This retailer is a one-stop bead resource for all beads and beading needs. Here you will find jewelry supplies, stringing products, metal wire, fibers, weaving threads, sea glass, vintage parts, Lucite flowers and filigrees, buttons, Czech glass buttons, and much more. Also the store hosts various special events and offers some in-store classes. Nymo, Fireline, as well as customized ‘BeadinPath’ products and more. Beading artists: look for further. Phone: 877-92-BEADS



Come and Greet the New <br>Shalin Liu Performance Center  Come and Greet the New
Shalin Liu Performance Center


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Rockport Music, host of the Rockport Chamber Music Festival, has a new home starting in June 2010. The new Shalin Liu Performance Center in Rockport will include an intimate concert hall, with a balcony and seating for 325 people with a spectacular two-story window at the rear of the stage, giving audiences a full view of the Atlantic Ocean. Audiences will be welcome to the center for musical programs as well as a film series, simulcasts of Metropolitan Opera performances, lectures by well-known authors, cabaret performances, and civic gatherings. Keep in touch with this new performance venue for a future of wonderful entertainment in a beautiful Maine coastal community. Phone: 978-546-7391.



Maine Beauty, on Canvas  Maine Beauty, on Canvas

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The Farnsworth Art Museum and Wyeth Center and Wyeth Center on Museum Drive in Rockland features the works of many Maine artists, including Andrew, N.C., and Jamie Wyeth, alongside a wonderful collection of American art, including works by American artists Gilbert Stuart, Frank Benson, Thomas Sully, and many more. The museum also presents many works by 20th-century sculptor Louise Nevelson. Phone: 207-596-6457



Spectacular on All Sides  Spectacular on All Sides

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Try this drive for unforgettable views: Beginning on the seaward side of Damariscotta, Route 130 leads south about 12 miles to the lighthouse at the spectacular Pemaquid Point (this lighthouse appears on the Maine quarter). Continue east on Route 32 north to U.S. 1. Be sure to visit the Rachel Carson Memorial Salt Pond. Located on the shores of Muscongus Bay, this tidal salt pond retains a bit of the sea every time the tide recedes. Wonderful for poking and exploring. The next historic towns on Route 1 are Waldoboro, Rockland, Camden, Lincolnville, Belfast, and Searsport. Phone: 207-677-2423.



Trail to 53,000 Works of Art  Trail to 53,000 Works of Art

The Maine Art Museum Trail offers more than 53,000 works of art, from ancient to contemporary, in a dazzling array of collections at seven leading art museums. Museums on the trail include Bates College Museum of Art (Lewiston), Bowdoin College Museum of Art (Brunswick), Colby College Museum of Art (Waterville), Farnsworth Art Museum (Rockland), Ogunquit Museum of American Art (Ogunquit), Portland Museum of Art (Portland), and University of Maine Museum of Art (Bangor). The museums’ permanent collections include works of art by the many artists who have vacationed or worked in Maine. They also feature masterpieces by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Edgar Degas, Mary Cassatt, and Pablo Picasso, Greek and Roman sculpture, early American silver and furniture, and contemporary textiles, prints, ceramics, and sculpture. Some museums also offer free admission during selected hours.



Tutu for You  Tutu for You

Visitors to Maine may be traveling with very young princesses and fairies or have a crop of them back at home, hoping for presents. One solution may be found at Pitter Patter, Inc., a children's boutique on Front Street in Bath, or at Ms. Lulu’s Boutique on Gold Street in Portland. This gift breakthrough is handmade, designer tutus for young children produced by Sheabella Tutus . The business was created in 2007 by two mothers with a herd of young daughters. Surrounded by fairies, ballerinas and princesses, the founders started to design and make their own tutus, and then to sell them, mostly online. These fun garments are handmade with the softest tulle and come in a variety of fresh colors, designs, and lengths. Great for ballet, dress-up, portraits, parties, mucking in streams, and searching for salamanders.



Wooden Wonders  Wooden Wonders

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The The Center for Furniture Craftsmanship in Rockport is a year-round woodworking school that also features The Messler Gallery, a public gallery displaying the work of students, faculty, and professional furniture makers on display. The gallery is the only venue in Maine dedicated to the ear-round exhibition of handcrafted furniture and fine woodworking, thus offering exposure for regional furniture makers. Phone: 207-594-5611.



SOUTH COAST    top of listings

Add a Cup of Cocoa for a <br>Perfect Day on the Sleigh  Add a Cup of Cocoa for a
Perfect Day on the Sleigh


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Wintertime in Maine brings with it elegance and serenity that is extra-wonderful from the seat of a horse-drawn sleigh. Rockin’ Horse Stables On Arundel Road in Kennebunkport offers guests an opportunity to enjoy the snow-sprinkled pine trees and frost-tipped fields while gliding on a sleigh with family and friends. After the sleigh ride, warm up next to a crackling fire with hot chocolate and conversation. Step back into the way life should be, if only for a day, and experience a true Maine adventure. Phone: 207-967-4288.



Art Happens Here at All Times of the Year  Art Happens Here at All Times of the Year

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The people who operate and visit River Tree Arts on Western Avenue in Kennebunk are not deterred by wintery weather. This community arts organization operates music, dance, and performing arts school, and also has three galleries open to the public year round. Stop in for some quiet time in Kennebunk and enjoy luscious original artwork in the heart of a community of artistry in all its forms, static and moving. Hours: Tuesday-Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Phone: 207-967-9120.



Beach Plum Farm Offers <br>Beautiful Seaside Strolls  Beach Plum Farm Offers
Beautiful Seaside Strolls


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Beach Plum Farm, on Route 1 in Ogunquit, is a 22-acre site with remnants of an old New England salt-water farm, natural landscapes and wildlife habitat. At the farm there is a walking loop which circles the fields and community gardens. Down by the salt marsh, you can see bayberry, beach plums and a variety of coastal birds. Benches provide spots to sit and contemplate. The loop walk can be completed at a leisurely pace in a half-hour. The farm was donated to the Great Works Regional Land Trust by Joe Littlefield in memory of his uncle, who farmed and sold vegetables from there since the 1920s.The land is open to the public, free, from dawn to dusk. Trails, benches, and community gardens, and beautiful views of the marches and ocean can be found there. Phone: 207-646-3604.



Beauty Along the Margin  Beauty Along the Margin

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The magnificent Marginal Way in Ogunquit is a paved footpath beginningin a corner of Oarweed Cove near the harbor, then running for one and a quarter miles to the marvelous expanse of Ogunquit Beach. This delightful, exhilarating walk meanders by bayberry and bittersweet bushes, gnarled shrubs of sea roses, shaded alcoves formed by wind-twisted trees jutting out onto high granite outcroppings, and views of the mighty Atlantic. Thirty memorial benches dotting the path offer places to sit and rest.



Carson’s Name Helps Protect Fragile Coastline  Carson’s Name Helps Protect Fragile Coastline

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The author whose seminal work, “Silent Spring,” launched the American environmental movement is the namesake for the Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge , consisting of a patchwork of properties along 50 miles of coastline from Kittery to Cape Elizabeth, with a headquarters on Route 9 in Wells. The refuge serves as protected region of valuable salt marshes and estuaries for migratory birds. Visitors are welcome to hike on the developed trails of the Refuge. is permitted in several rivers and creeks in the Refuge. Phone: 207-646-9226.



Farm Houses Diverse Samples of Fine Art  Farm Houses Diverse Samples of Fine Art

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Set on an antique dairy farm with sweeping views of expansive open-field trails, the Haley Farm Gallery on Haley Road in Kittery is housed in a turn-of-the-century renovated barn surrounded with sweeping views of expansive open-field trails, a conservation duck pond and the Spruce Creek. The gallery exhibits works by local and national artists as well as unique handcrafted artistic gift items. You can always find an original at Haley Art Gallery Gift Shop, showing work by the artisans of Morocco, Indonesia, Armenia, South Africa, Chile, India, Vietnam, Kenya, the United States, and Canada. The Gallery works directly with the artisans or through Fair Trade Federation to assure that artisans are not exploited. Phone: 207-439-2669. Phone: 207-439-7612.



Mount Agamenticus Offers a Wonderful Walk  Mount Agamenticus Offers a Wonderful Walk

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The Mount Agamenticus Conservation Region in York contains 10,000 acres of land and is one of the largest remaining expanses of undeveloped forests in coastal New England. The area provides an ideal location for picnicking, hiking, biking, horseback riding, sightseeing, and ATV riders. Recommended trails are an intermediate trail from the summit, following Witch Hazel to Ring Trail to Horse Trail and another intermediate trail from Mountain Road following Ring Trail to Witch Hazel to Sweet Fern to Ring Trail. Trail signs, color blazes and the trail map tell which uses are permitted. Phone: 207-361-1102.



Outrageous Outlets

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The Kittery Outlets on Route 1 in Kittery are also known as America’s Maine Street for Shopping, and you’ll see why when you visit this one-mile-long strip of famous outlet stores. The outlets include 120 stores – way too many to name here – but dedicated shoppers can easily guess the names of the major brands to be found there. Many stores host special events and all kinds of sales, Located at the gateway from New Hampshire into the South Coast region of Maine, Kittery is home to many wonderful attractions, from beaches to museums, to entertain family members of all ages and tastes while shoppers are doing their thing.



Peace, Beauty, Prayer  Peace, Beauty, Prayer

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St. Anthony’s Franciscan Monastery in Kennebunk features extensive walking paths on the 60-acre estate, through gardens, woodlands, and outdoor chapels. Thousands of people come to enjoy these peaceful and expansive grounds every year. Everybody is most welcome to visit, to rest, to meditate, and to pray. There is also a gift shop, as well as a guesthouse. Phone: 207-967-4865



Spectacular Views and Protected Wildlife  Spectacular Views and Protected Wildlife

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The Wells Reserve at Laudholm Farm on Laudholm Farm Road in Wellsfeatures a 7-mile trail system, exhibits, coastal resource library and an Ecology Center. Seven miles of hiking and cross-country skiing trails provide access to woodlands, fields, wetlands, beach, and dunes. Spectacular views and diverse habitats make the reserve popular for nature photographers and birdwatchers. Trail maps are available at the Visitor Center. Phone: 207-646-1555 ext 116.



Trail to 53,000 Works of Art  Trail to 53,000 Works of Art

Trail to 53,000 Works of Art The Maine Art Museum Trail offers more than 53,000 works of art, from ancient to contemporary, in a dazzling array of collections at seven leading art museums. Museums on the trail include Bates College Museum of Art (Lewiston), Bowdoin College Museum of Art (Brunswick), Colby College Museum of Art (Waterville), Farnsworth Art Museum (Rockland), Ogunquit Museum of American Art (Ogunquit), Portland Museum of Art (Portland), and University of Maine Museum of Art (Bangor). The museums’ permanent collections include works of art by the many artists who have vacationed or worked in Maine. They also feature masterpieces by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Edgar Degas, Mary Cassatt, and Pablo Picasso, Greek and Roman sculpture, early American silver and furniture, and contemporary textiles, prints, ceramics, and sculpture. Some museums also offer free admission during selected hours.



WESTERN LAKES/MOUNTAINS    top of listings

A Jangle of the Harness and Off We Go  A Jangle of the Harness and Off We Go

It has been called the “ultimate low-impact winter sport” – that is, a horse-drawn sleigh ride through the New England woods and meadows. That description is, well, reasonable, but a sleigh ride also is pure fun in a beautiful, unforgettable winter landscape. Rides are offered by many farms, including High View Farm in Harrison, where the farm’s host promise that the jingle of sleigh bells on the night air will ring on as a wonderful and lingering memory. Phone: 207-595-1601. Meadow Creek Farm in Sumner offers sleigh rides at many different locations throughout Maine. Each of the beautiful Belgian draft horse teams weighs 2000 pounds and carries more than 200 bells on the harnesses and wagon. Meadow Creek also offers private specialty rides geared to your specifications. Phone: 207-388-2044.



All the Routes for All the Snowmobiles  All the Routes for All the Snowmobiles

To say the snowmobile trails in Maine are some of the finest in the country would be an understatement at best. Maine’s Interconnected Trail System (ITS) is provided to snowmobilers through the joint effort of the Maine Snowmobile Association, headquartered in Augusta, and the Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands, Department of Conservation. You can get a detailed map of the Interconnected Trail System by contacting the Maine Snowmobile Association at PO Box 80, Augusta, 04332. Phone: 207-622-6983



Appalachian Trail, Northern Version  Appalachian Trail, Northern Version

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The The Rangeley Lakes National Scenic Byway follows Routes 17 and 4, around Rangeley Lake. The route follows the ridgeline of the Appalachian Mountains before dropping into rolling hills and valleys. The Height of Land on Route 17 is the centerpiece of this scenic drive, offering breathtaking views of Mooselookmeguntic and Upper Richardson Lakes. Prepare to see moose.



Bethel Welcomes Walkers and Bikers

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Bethel is an ideal place for walkers of all ages and abilities, from a leisurely stroll through the National Historic District to a more rigorous walk through the village up Paradise Road. For starters, the Bethel Recreational Path is a one-mile multi-use paved trail that begins at Davis Park and extends across the Androscoggin River on a multi-use bridge and out to the North Road. The path features an authentic scaled replica of the famous Artists’ Covered Bridge over the Sunday River. The Androscoggin River Recreational Walking Trail is a 1.5-mile trail from the Riverside Rest Area on Route 2, three miles east of Bethel, to the River View Resort. This trail provides the visitor an opportunity to see the river up close and enjoy the serenity of a wooded setting.



Dogs + Sleds = Wow!  Dogs + Sleds = Wow!

Experience the thrill and beauty of sledding over frozen ground and snowy mountain passes behind a team of powerful Siberian Huskies or Alaskan Malamutes. New England Dogsledding is located in Mason Township, Maine, on the Maine and New Hampshire border of the White Mountain National Forest. The company hosts fun and educational dog sledding, mushing, and sled dog tours in the Bethel, Maine; the Sunday River Ski Area; North Conway, New Hampshire; and on 15,000-acre Wilderness Trail System at the Balsams, New Hampshire. The company teaches guests the ropes and allows them to experience the thrill of driving their own team. Be whisked off on an amazing winter adventure through the majestic wilderness. Phone: 207-836-2703.



Enter the Life of a 19th-Century <br> Maine Farm Family  Enter the Life of a 19th-Century
Maine Farm Family


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The Washburn-Norlands Living History Center on Norlands Road in Livermore offers living history tours led by interpreters in mid-18th century clothing who portray people of the neighborhood. In the school house you will learn first hand about rural education in 1853. You can try using a quill pen or test your skills in arithmetic or spelling. In the mansion house you can chat with young Caroline Washburn as she shows you through the family home. The Washburn kitchen is always a busy place of cooking, ironing, playing games, story telling, and spinning. There a guided tour in the buildings and self guided on the grounds. Tours offered Tuesdays and Thursdays, June 29 to September 3, 2010. Phone: 207-897-4366



Floating on the Boardwalk  Floating on the Boardwalk

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Holt Pond Preserve in Bridgton is a scenic and fun walk through woods and over a quaking bog boardwalk. Starting at the parking area off Grist Mill Road, the path takes you through a mixed forest and into a red maple swamp. Next comes the Holt Pond Overlook and Boardwalk. The boardwalk crosses a quaking mat of sphagnum moss. The boardwalk quakes because the sphagnum moss is floating, colonizing the open water in front of you. Phone: 207-647-8580



History and Culture of Mills on Display Here  History and Culture of Mills on Display Here

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From the 1850s to the 1950s the textile mills, shoe mills and brickyards of Lewiston and neighboring Auburn (L-A) made up the state's largest manufacturing center. Museum L-A documents the industries and the people who made them thrive. Within the 1850s Bates Mill, the museum displays vintage machinery, tools, shoes and quilts along with an oral history tour of mill workers from both cities. Open year-round, Monday through Saturday,10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Phone: 207-333-3881.



Let's Go Rock Pickin'  Let's Go Rock Pickin'

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Mount Apatite Park in Auburn is a free collecting site where children can search through rock piles scattered through the woods; Lord Hill Quarry within the White Mountain National Forest in Stoneham, another popular collecting site where visitors might find topaz, quartz and aquamarine crystals. Mount Apatite Park is owned and administered by the City of Auburn. It is open to the public, and no special permission to visit is required. Further information, including a detailed map of the park and its trail system, is available from the Auburn Parks & Recreation Department Phone: 207-784-0191.



Meet “The Crag”  Meet “The Crag”

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At an elevation of 510 feet, Thorncrag Nature Sanctuary in Lewiston (“The Crag”), a 312-acre wildlife preserve, is forested oasis above the city surrounded on three sides by urban development. Thorncrag encompasses several habitats: upland wetlands, mixed forest, restored farm meadows, vernal pools, and old growth forest. Visitors are encouraged to walk the trails, using a 32-page brochure for guidance. Passive recreation like birdwatching, walking, snowshoeing, cross-country skiing, sledding, skating, and nature photography are encouraged.



Step on his Toe; He Won’t Mind  Step on his Toe; He Won’t Mind

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The Rumford Information Center on Route 2 has an 18-foot-tall statue of folk lumberjack Paul Bunyan that seems to serve as a magnet for visitors who can’t resist taking whimsical pictures of their traveling companions. Also nearby is the beautiful Rumford Falls (also known as Pennacook Falls), a 180-foot-tall cascade of water into the Androscoggin River. So save some film after having your fun with the biggest lumberjack of all. Phone: 207-364-0925‎.



The Artists Can’t All Be Wrong  The Artists Can’t All Be Wrong

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Sunday River Bridge, popularly known as the Artist's Covered Bridge , in Newry, achieved that name because of its reputation as being the most photographed and painted of the venerable covered bridges in Maine. If the artists, all agree, what are you waiting for? Those of us who don’t measure up to the skills of a Matisse can at least grab a camera and a traveling companion and do some poses on this very New England-y piece of essential architecture. The bridge is located about four miles northwest of North Bethel near Routes 2 and 26.



Trail to 53,000 Works of Art  Trail to 53,000 Works of Art

Trail to 53,000 Works of Art The Maine Art Museum Trail offers more than 53,000 works of art, from ancient to contemporary, in a dazzling array of collections at seven leading art museums. Museums on the trail include Bates College Museum of Art (Lewiston), Bowdoin College Museum of Art (Brunswick), Colby College Museum of Art (Waterville), Farnsworth Art Museum (Rockland), Ogunquit Museum of American Art (Ogunquit), Portland Museum of Art (Portland), and University of Maine Museum of Art (Bangor). The museums’ permanent collections include works of art by the many artists who have vacationed or worked in Maine. They also feature masterpieces by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Edgar Degas, Mary Cassatt, and Pablo Picasso, Greek and Roman sculpture, early American silver and furniture, and contemporary textiles, prints, ceramics, and sculpture. Some museums also offer free admission during selected hours.




Acadia/Bar Harbor/Down East Aroostook Augusta/Kennebec Greater Portland & Casco Bay
Maine Highlands Mid Coast South Coast Western Lakes/Mountains
Big Moose Band -- Gardiner
March 12, 2010
Big Moose Band at Johnson Hall -- Gardiner
March 12, 2010
St. Patrick's Day Parade -- Bath
March 13, 2010
St. Patrick’s Day Celebration -- Ogunquit
March 13, 2010
St. Patrick's Day Fireworks – Sugarloaf, Carrabassett Valley
March 17, 2010
Inanna, Sisters in Rhythm -- Gardiner
March 19, 2010
40-Mile Meal with New England Farm 2 Fork Project -- East Waterboro
March 19, 2010 to March 21, 2010
Inanna, Sisters in Rhythm – Gardiner
March 19, 2010
Susie Burke & David Surette -- Gardiner
March 26, 2010
America's Mattress Race -- Shawnee Peak, Bridgton
March 27, 2010
Cardboard Box Race – Saddleback, Rangeley
March 27, 2010
Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni -- Rockland
March 28, 2010
Eat the Heat Chili Cook-off and Firefighters Race -- Sunday River Ski Resort, Newry
March 28, 2010
Maine Maple Sunday Breakfast -- East Waterboro
March 28, 2010
Maine Maple Sunday -- Statewide
March 28, 2010
The Hot Seats -- Gardiner
April 2, 2010
Pond Skimming Contest -- Saddleback, Rangeley
April 3, 2010
Easter Weekend at Sunday River -- Newry
April 3, 2010 to April 4, 2010
Easter Egg Hunt and Costume Parade at Saddleback -- Rangeley
April 4, 2010
Revision -- Gardiner
April 9, 2010
Ruthie Foster and the Family Band -- Rockland
April 10, 2010
Mark Miller & his Boomer Blues Band -- Gardiner
April 16, 2010
Cowboy Junkies -- Rockland
April 17, 2010
Valencia Robinson -- Gardiner
April 23, 2010
Cherish the Ladies-- Rockland
April 23, 2010
Bangor Garden Show – Bangor
April 23, 2010 to April 25, 2010
Cherish the Ladies -- Rockland
April 23, 2010
Shalin Liu Performance Center Grand Opening -- Rockport
June 10, 2010
Garrick Ohlsson Plays Chopin -- Rockport
June 11, 2010
Click here for a full list of events.

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