Hugging Maine’s Coastline

We’ve been lingering in Maine a little longer than planned, and the primary reason – Lobstah!  Of course it is Maine’s main crustacean, scientifically known as Homarus Americanus, or American Lobster.  They come in several colors, but not red – except when they are cooked – then they are all red like the one pictured below.  It takes an American lobster 6-7 years to get to an edible size.  They are long-lived animals, thought to be capable of living over 100 years.

Lobster
Lobstah!

Lobstermen with their traps and lobsters seem to be the unique and distinctive tradition here in Maine.

Lobsterman at work
Just one of the thousands of lobsterman seen at work along the coast.
Prospect Harbor
Lobsterman

In addition to the lobstermen, there are picturesque harbors, wharves and small coastal towns dotted with lobster boats, traps and buoys.

Lobster boats and traps
Lobster boats and traps at Prospect Harbor

Lobsters are caught using baited, one-way traps with color-coded marker buoys that uniquely mark each one.  These buoys decorate the surface of the ocean along many miles of the coastline.

Buying live lobsters direct from a lobsterman is the best option and you get to see their yard littered with traps, ropes and buoys – tools of the trade.

Lobsterman's Yard
A lobsterman’s Yard

Being seafood lovers, we had a lobster feast almost every day while in Maine.  And here is a fun fact – long before they became such a delicacy, lobsters were fed to prisoners and servants.  It was considered “poor man’s food” during the colonial times.  Well, we were able to buy it for as little as $3.99 per pound while staying near Bar Harbor – we didn’t want to leave!

Here’s the best part – lobster is highly nutritious.  Despite its rich, buttery taste, it is a low-calorie, low-fat source of protein: 3.5 ounces of meat has only about 96 calories and less than 2 grams of fat.  Succulent and a healthy food to boot!  We ate them with gusto every day and not worry about gaining extra pounds.

Lobster wit
Steve’s new favorite refrigerator magnet

Enough said about the favorite crustacean, how about Maine’s coastline?   Get this, Maine’s convoluted coastline is 51 miles longer than California’s, at 3,478 miles – that’s if you count all the bays and tidal inlets.  So, off we went to journey along the mid-coast area, driving to Penobscot Bay.  It was being billed as the most scenic body of water on the eastern seaboard, with the “must see” towns of Rockland, Rockport and Camden.  This area also includes many historic lighthouses and museums, plus lots of shopping and excellent restaurants.

Penobscot Bay
View of Penobscot Bay with Camden Harbor just to the right of center.

Our first stop was in Rockland, where we walked across the mile-long granite Rockland Breakwater which was built in 1880.  The breakwater is now on the National Register of Historic Places and at the end of the granite pier sits The Rockland Breakwater Light.

At Marine Park in Rockport we enjoyed the small but busy sheltered harbor.  Here too are historic lime kilns used more than a century ago.

Marine Park, Rockport
Marine Park, Rockport, just half of the so picture perfect view

After paying an entrance fee to get into Camden Hills State Park, we hiked the overlapping Tablelands, Megunticook and Mt. Battie trails.  It was a fairly strenuous 4-mile round trip with steep pitches, as it climbed steadily to the ocean lookout.  At the top we were rewarded with a bird’s eye view of Camden Harbor, and the panorama of Penobscot Bay and its islands.

Camden Harbor
A closer look at a living postcard, Camden Harbor viewed from Tablelands Trail
Penobscot Bay
Penobscot Bay and its many islands, with Mount Desert Island  in the background

The southern coast of Maine is known for its beaches, dozens of lighthouses and endless boutiques, antique stores and museums.  We stopped at Wells, Kennebunk, Kennebunkport and Ogunquit.

Walkers Point
At Walker’s Point, the George HW Bush summer home in Kennebunkport.

At Perkins Cove, we followed a scenic cliff walk named Marginal Way for over a mile.  It meanders along the ocean and connects Perkins Cove to the town of Qgunquit.  It is a very popular trail and was crowded, even on a weekday.

Marginal Way
The Marginal Way Trail – very pretty walk but too crowded for us.
Ogunquit Beach
Ogunquit Beach

For the lighthouse lovers out there, Maine has 68 lighthouses.  We walked to and viewed a few of them.   Each is unique with its own heroic rescues and romantic stories, and it seems we never get tired of checking them out.  Most are automated now and some have been preserved as museums.

And with that, our Maine sojourn comes to an end.  This was our first time staying in Maine, but it won’t be the last – we really enjoyed the atmosphere and already know we must come back.  During our latest excursions here, our base camps were at Saltwater Farm Campground in Cushing, and at Moody Beach RV park in Wells.  If interested in Steve’s campground reviews, click here.

 



 


18 thoughts on “Hugging Maine’s Coastline

  1. You provide so much information and such lovely photos in each and every one of your posts. Terry and I both agree that yours will be THE go-to blog when we begin our travels up the east coast. Thanks! 🙂

  2. Mona Lisa: We are currently in Whitfield, Maine visiting with friends and did the same route you and Steve are on, 2 years ago. Camden Bay, etc….Great picts; the weather has been wonderful….enjoy your journey southward….

  3. Thanks for sharing! Felt as if I was there! 🙂
    Greetings from Stockholm, Sweden!

  4. Beautiful country. Glad you are enjoying. Those are amazing Lobster prices and I had no idea they lived that long 🙂

  5. You were making me crazy!! I need some Maine lobster!! Too bad it is so far away. I can’t believe those prices. We paid $5.99 a pound and I thought that was good. Hope you got your fill:)

    Camden is a neat little place with wonderful coastal views. You certainly did an excellent job sharing the Maine coast with bloggers. Hope more people head that way for a visit.

  6. Absolutely beautiful…nothing quite compares to the Maine coast…although California is a close second! The harbors and lighthouses sure make for beautiful photos!

    I love lobstah!

  7. Lobster every day? And at $3.99 a pound? Now that’s just cruel putting that in print! We don’t see many lobsters in the desert. I did enjoy seeing your photos.

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