And not just Maine, but Vermont, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and even New Jersey .... and every other state in the vicinity. So I must confess to my home state of Oregon, about which I have bragged my entire adult life .... I have been unfaithful to you. I left my heart (to quote Tony Bennett) on the shores of the Atlantic in the small village of Camden, Maine. But first .....
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Our trip started out with one day in the Big Apple, New York City.
We did a tour of Ellis Island, crossing it off my bucket list. Not as impactive as I had hoped, but definitely worth seeing. It's accessible by a short boat ride that takes you right under her loveliness, the Statue of Liberty.
The tour led us through the process that thousands of our fore bearers walked as they entered our country legally. The tour thoroughly impressed upon our minds, the fear and wonder of those brave people who left everything familiar to sail to a new land, and how terrified they were of being sent back to Europe. (The truth is, only a small percentage were denied entrance.)
Where they waited in line. |
We also stopped by the tragic site of the former World Trade Center towers and the beautiful memorial fountains where the buildings once stood.
The names of all the victims are imprinted along the wall, including the fact that unborn children also died that day. (Side note: I will never understand why some unborn children are considered victims when their lives are violently taken by terrorists and others, who are destroyed by abortions, are not. Trust me, THAT will be another post.)
Then on to check one off Husband's bucket list -- the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Disclaimer: I am not an art connoisseur. I mean, I respect old stuff..... I do ..... because it's old and still around. I get that. But nothing there was familiar. No Mona Lisa. No Washington Crossing the Delaware. There were, however, lots of naked people ..... meaning paintings and statues. Sheesh. Put some clothes on, please. I much preferred the Smithsonian and so my opinion of the "Met" probably should be ignored. But the building itself, was fabulous.
Times Square! Central Park! Oh yeah! Visual overload to the max! This was our second visit to this amazing city and someday we'll get there when it's not raining. Someday.
Borrowed this pic off the web. |
Then we headed north and the magic began, in spite of the semi-lack of abundant color.
"The leaves are late this year. We had a really warm September."... we were told several times.
Nevertheless, we saw Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine including a host of towns and villages with names I can't remember. We drove through Portland .... the other Portland, visiting a few of its historic light houses
..... and although the leaves were "late" -- the homes, the architecture, THE CHARM was overwhelming. It seemed as if every home sprang off the pages of a story book. The term "tract home" is probably an unknown entity there. Nothing pre-fab. Just clapboard and brick, gables and shutters, window boxes and brightly painted front doors. And it went on and on. Home after home, building after building, town after town. Pride of ownership was everywhere. Lawns were green and mowed. Chrysanthemums and pumpkins celebrated the season on porches.
This one got a little carried away. Try to ignore the Halloween spiders. |
"It's no use, Oregon Dear. You lose. You can't compare to this."
The quintessential white church with the tall steeple. Every town had one or two. |
Husband and Dear Friends wandered off with their cameras, and I meandered along the main street marveling at the charm. The shops weren't full of touristy trinkets. They held lovely woolen blankets, linens, tasteful home decor, yarns, stationery, and leather goods, along with an occasional high-end sporting goods store (my kind of fashion).
And then there was Woodstock, Vermont. Too much traffic clogging the streets, but the buildings ....
See what I'm talkin' about? (Caught a brief moment between trucks, cars, and tourist buses.) |
Another favorite spot of mine was our room in Trenton, ME, just a few miles outside of Acadia National Park. We stayed two nights at the Open Hearth Inn, in one of the large, newer (1970s) upper rooms. The extra touches by the proprietors who truly cared, were noted and appreciated, including the home-made muffins each morning.
Me, Madame Proprietor, and the muffins. |
Open Hearth Inn, built in 1830. (We stayed in another building behind it.) I happily gave them a generous review on Trip Advisor. |
Next door was a three-generation-owned-and-run, cluttered but homey restaurant that featured, like every other eatery in this state -- lobster. Oh yes. Melted butter and all. We ate there twice.
Acadia was a visual wonder, seeming to be entirely situated upon one mammoth granite slab.
Another interesting fact: Very few actual beaches there. They don't have sand like we have on the west coast.
Their sand comes from ground shells and is more coarse. |
Crossing the bar at Bar Harbor. It leads to an island and is under water in high tide. (The bar, not the island.) |
We may have been early for the leaves, but not for this. Sunset in Acadia. |
The weather was perfect. And by the time we hit Vermont, the leaves were strutting their colors.
Vermont. Another borrowed picture. |
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As I said, Maine wins. The whole state was one big post card. Cold winters, you say? Yeah, apparently so .... because many of the tourist-supported businesses were just days away from shutting down for the season, allowing their owners to escape to Florida till spring. But I kept thinking ..... with a wood stove and plenty of firewood, and as long as I didn't have to actually GO anywhere ..... I could really do the whole boots and sweaters, soup, hot cocoa, and knitting thing. I mean, they plow the roads, right? We have a 4-wheel drive. And Maine needs more Republicans. Sounds like a win-win to me.
Next post: The Canadian version of Niagara Falls and laundry day with the Amish. Scroll up or click here.
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