Monday, August 28, 2017

THE STONE BARN - A STEP BACK IN TIME




Throughout Acadia National Park as well as Mount Desert Island, you can find little pockets of quietness - if you know where to look for them.  Sometimes you just stumble upon them, as with my post Where Is It?
STONE BARN - CROOKED ROAD - BAR HARBOR MAINE

So let me tell you about another little pocket of quietness located in Bar Harbor, Maine, a little historic area called The Stone Barn.  So you may be saying, yeah, I have been to that location, pretty cool stone barn, but not much to see.  Yet the site is a favorite with the locals and you can come away with some stunning photos, if you know where to look.  You see, besides the stone barn and other historic buildings there, hidden off in the tree's is a hiking trail which passes through woods and out into a huge field swamped with colorful lupines.
STONE BARN - POND - BAR HARBOR MAINE

When the trail splits, go right, and you will get some nice views of the old barn and historic buildings from the rear, and off to the left is an almost magical little pond.  The hidden trail may not be an abandoned trail, but it is well hidden and worth listing along side any abandoned trail on the island.
The Stone Barn is located at the corner of the Crooked Road and Norway Drive.  The Stone Barn Farm is one of a small number of surviving farm properties on Mount Desert Island.   Located at the junction of Crooked Road and Norway Drive, the farm has a distinctive stone barn, built in 1907, along with a c. 1850 Greek Revival farm house and carriage barn.  The farmhouse and carriage house were probably built sometime between 1850 and 1860, based on their architectural style, although local histories have placed the farmhouse construction as early as 1840.
 So if your approaching along the Crooked road from Hulls cove - route 3, when you come to Norway Drive turn right and pull into tiny pull over there.  The path is hidden and close to side of road.  You will see one or two telephone poles and a large metal box, go past them and the trail begins just inside the woods.



STONE BARN - BAR HARBOR MAINE


WILDFLOWERS - STONE BARN - BAR HARBOR MAINE

Gathering photos near the Stone Barn
Crooked Road, Bar Harbor, Maine








Saturday, August 26, 2017

LITTLE HUNTER'S BEACH IN ACADIA NATIONAL PARK




LITTLE HUNTER'S BEACH
Little Hunter's Beach seems to also have joined the long and growing list of abandoned places in Acadia National Park.  The Little Hunter's brook Trail also seems to have vanished off maps.  If you have never been to Little Hunter's Beach than you have missed out on a unique spot within the park.
It is not a sand beach, it is a rock beach, and a small one at that.  What makes it such a unique place is it is located in a small cove where the waves come crashing in, which over the years acts much like a rock tumbler, causing many of the stones there to be either perfectly round or perfectly oval shaped.   When my kids were young I would take them there and they would call the rocks eggs.
When I passed by there last year I noticed the beach no longer had a sign marking it and checked a current map and saw it no longer listed.  In fact, its bigger sister, Hunter's Beach, further up the road, was also missing from the map.

LITTLE HUNTERS BEACH - ACADIA NATIONAL PARK


Some people believe these perfectly smooth stones hold mysterious healing powers while others just like to take one or two home with them, however - that is illegal and can earn you a date in court before a Federal Judge.  It's okay to look and admire the unique stones, but leave them were they are for others to enjoy.  Over the years because people steal the stones, there are much fewer of them today.
LITTLE HUNTERS BEACH - ACADIA NATIONAL PARK

So how do you locate Little Hunter's Beach, it's easy, but you will have to be alert for the things to look for.
Little Hunters Beach - Acadia National Park

Drive along the One Way section of the Park Loop road, past the popular Sand Beach and Thunder Hole.  Continue past the Fabbri picnic area, and you will soon cross a stone bridge.  Here the road climbs up hill, and you will soon pass the service entrance to Blackwoods Campground, there will be a cross walk and a wooden fence on the left.  Now drive on for some distance still, but keep looking for a small stone bridge you will come to.  Pull over before the small bridge, and on the left hand side of the road there will be a long wooden stairway leading to the beach.
LITTLE HUNTERS BEACH - ACADIA NATIONAL PARK

Now if you want to be certain you find the beach, go to the Bar Harbor Village Green and take the Island Explorer free bus, the Sand Beach bus, and get off at Blackwoods Campground - or drive or bike to the campground.  Once there, from the bus stop, take the camp loop road to the far left, you will pass tent sites on your right and woods on the left.  In a short ways you will come to a path on the left that leads to Ocean Drive and the high cliffs overlooking the ocean.  This is a very short path and once use to be a service road for the campground.
At Ocean Drive (the Park Loop Road) turn right and walk in the same direction as the traffic in til you reach the small bridge with its steep wooden stairway to the left of the bridge.  There is also a sign telling about the area tucked just inside the woods there, but nearly impossible to see when driving past.

LITTLE HUNTERS BEACH
"Unmarked Stone Beach"
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK

GPS
N 44 17' 55"
W 068 12' 40"











Monday, August 21, 2017

THE ACADIA YOU HAVEN'T SEEN by Matthew Marchon





Hot off the press as they say is the newest tool in discovering the experience of locating and exploring secret locations and abandoned trails in Acadia National Park.  The name of the book pretty much says it all, "The Acadia You Haven't Seen - Abandoned Trails and Forgotten Places," by Matthew Marchon. 
When it comes to researching and locating hidden and secret places within Acadia National Park, no one covers this stuff like Matt does, as he is gifted as a writer as well as a photographer.  Weather it be abandoned trails, phantom trails, ghost trails, or abandoned and forgotten places within  the National Park, no one covers it the way Matthew Marchon does, and for this reason this book is a must have for your book shelf.  I predict this off trail hiking guide will be one of those books that people will be reaching for just as they do with Pathmakers - so if you have any interest at all in Abandoned Trails or learning more about the forgotten places in Acadia National Park, this book is for you.

To order a copy of THE ACADIA YOU HAVEN'T SEEN click on the link below.

THE ACADIA YOU HAVEN'T SEEN Vol. 1
THE ACADIA YOU HAVEN'T SEEN - Kindle Edition



Sunday, August 20, 2017

RADIO TOWER TRAIL AT OTTER CLIFFS

At the moment we don't know exactly what to call this trail, but yeah, we spent the other day by the picnic area by Otter Cliffs.  We took a photo of the monument there, searched around in the woods not far from the bathrooms and located what appears to be a old well capped off with a very large arched slab of granite, you can still see the well under the slab.
Our real goal was to walk the Otter Cliffs trail to get some photos of the cliffs where Kathy Frost had been pushed off the cliff to her death by her husband, the story is on my site Deaths In Acadia national Park in chronological order.  We also did a blog People Killed In Acadia National Park..
So we got the photos of the cliffs we wanted and walked back through the picnic area and out onto the Otter Creek Road a short ways, when I saw a small field I wanted to check out.  To the far left corner of the field was a couple of apple tree's plum full of apples.  The apples were on the small side and sour, too bad, there was a number of apple pies just begging to be made.
As I was taking photos of the apple tree's, I noticed what appeared to look like a trail in the woods on the other side of the apple tree, so we checked it out.  Sure enough, it was an old trail, or road.  My son say road, but to me it appears to be too narrow for a road, but it was in very good shape for how old it was, as you can see in the photos.  Clear away some of the fallen tree's and you have a ready to go trail.



So to the left of the trail we could see one end of it, blocked off by two large boulders, with tree's and brush blocking the view of the trail from the Otter Creek road.  So we followed the trail to the right, and for most of the way the trail remained in very good condition and very easy to follow.  But the final forth of the trail the good path we had been following quickly ended in what amounted to a deer trail, which we continued to follow.  It led to a large parking lot which I would guess was located just up past the Gorham Mountain Parking Lot.
We need to do one more trip back there to see if there is more to this trail, we will update on it in a week or two.  Until than you can see the photos we took of the trail the other day.



The Monument at Otter Cliffs, Acadia National Park




Otter Cliff Road can be seen from one end of abandoned trail - Acadia national Park
So we finally got to return back to the area of this abandoned trail-road, checked out the other side of the roadway and could f8ind nothing. 









WAVES AT OCEAN DRIVE - ACADIA NATIONAL PARK