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Food, fine design, easy access - part of the charm of Portland, Maine
by Christine Tibbetts/The Tifton Gazette August 22, 2010 (permission by author)
tibbetts1@bellsouth.net

What! No lobster?
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  Lobster didn't dominate my dinner tables in Portland, Maine, three nights in June.  Certainly is a famous local food, and plentiful, but chefs and cooks and eating-out neighborhood people were serving up all sorts of other specialties too and that's what I wanted to try.

  Chunky chowder with seafood from Casco Bay at Eve's Garden in the Harbor Hotel.  Asparagus bisque there too.  Wild Maine mussels in star anise cream.

  Baked beans and brown bread topped with a basted egg at the locals-gather-here Front Room on Congress Street.  Ginger mint tea at the foot sanctuary.

  Maine blueberries in muffins and pancakes and handfuls.  So many chefs and food artisans, brewers and spirit makers tha Portland devotes an October festival to Maine food and wine.

  For a culinary holiday, consider "Harvest on the Harbor" Oct. 21-23.

  Small markets downtown with breads and bakery goodies, fresh fruit, cheeses and wines nestled in among the houses, shops, museums, and gardens along easy-to-walk streets.

  Easy city I think Portland is to plan a picnic, especially if you like to relax in beautiful gardens.

  Summer flowers are everywhere, gigantic lush peonies and pansies in every hue.  These folks rejoice in the light and warmth of their short warm-weather season.
 
  Practical, right-to-the-point pleasant people:  that's who I found in Portland plus two small Maine towns.

  A windjammer sailing adventure triggered the trip north so discovering Rockland, Camden and the Maine gateway city Portland became a bonus.

  Portland propelled me to Europe on an easy afternoon walk with architecture reminiscent of a British countryside city center.

  Modern buildings too and volunteer Bob King in the Observatory Museum urged me to visit the just-renovated public library, including the Maine sculptors exhibit.

  Can't say that's advice I hear often but his info about the last maritime signal tower in America was so interesting I trusted him.

  Makes sense that cities with deep ports but no view of the open ocean needed a way to signal the ships and Portland's 1807 tower survived.

  Privately owned until given to the city in 1937 and renovated in 1939 as a WPA project, the Observatory Museum it is today gives visitors with good stair-climbing legs a view all the way to the White Mountains.

  Water matters in Portland and Casco Bay to the east, the deep-water estuary to the Fore River on the west and the bustling Portland Harbor anchoring the south.

  This is the real deal, a working harbor.  Sure, shops and eating places too, but the mood is productive and that can mean hearty coffee and fresh seafood.

  I stayed in the handsome Harbor Hotel with easy waterfront access and launching points for a variety of walking tours - my own or the guided kind.

  My travel buddy Syd Blackmarr and I strolled a lot, starting with breakfast at the Casco Bay end of Congress Street, wanting to poke our noses in every interesting spot.

  Second day we discovered Norm Forgey with Maine Day Trip and hopped in his comfy car to learn more about what we had seen and what we missed and absorb some of his abundant "Maine is so interesting" knowledge.

  That works in Portland and all around the state because Forgey likes day trips and likes personalizing them to particular interests.

  A favorite day journey of his connects the Winslow Homer and Edward Hopper paintings in the Portland Museum of Art with houses on the rocky Maine coast where the artists actually lived and painted.

  Maine artists are abundant in this museum, famous as Hopper; Homer, the Wyeth family, Robert Indiana, Mary Cassatt and Louise Nevelson plus some not-known-to-me Mainers with interesting works.

  The Portland Museum of Art recently acquired Winslow Homer's studio at Prouts Neck, 12 miles south of the city, and they're restoring it as it was during his life, 1836-1910.

  What a pleasure to actually see those crashing waves on the rocky Maine coast and see his paintings of them.  Homer is credited with transforming American coastal painting.

  I travel to transform myself.

  Ulysses S. Grant is in this museum too, a taller-than-life sculpture intended for the U. S. Capitol but rejected saying he looked too battle wary.

  How could he not?

  Lots of people were in the Museum of Art, just like in the library.  Local people I think, appreciating community.  For me, that makes travel better, being in the places that reflect and intrigue the ones who live there.

  Right next door is the Children's Museum, bursting with energy and happy families.  Syd and I high-tailed it to the top floor for the Camera Obscura, a popular 15th century device that actually dates back to 500 B.C.

  Louisa Donelson, Children's Museum visitor guide, says it's one of only a handful in the U.S. and certainly my first.

  I'd read about Camera Obscura in "Girl with the Pearl Earring", a tale about artist Jan Vermeer but never thought I'd use one.  Portland's distinctive that way.

  Here's the deal: best panorama view of the city in a room without windows.  A real image appears through a small hole or lens into a darkened chamber.

  Vermeer used one to paint his portraits.  Portland Children's Museum uses it to show the city scenes outside and teach all kinds of architecture, photography, optics, city planning and other lessons.

  I simply liked it.

  Wish I'd gotten in the Museum of African Culture on Brown Street, but showed up too late - intriguing art in the windows indicating feminine spirit traditions: mothers and grandmothers, queens and queen mothers, princesses, the feminine ocean.

  Much of what I found and admired is on Congress and Free Streets, basically parallel, and only two blocks north of my Harbor Hotel.  Portland is a sensible walking city.

  Soakology, however, my wonderful walking-by-it discovery, isn't on any street.  Number 30 City Center is the address and it's a pedestrian walkway, no cars on this short stretch.

  Who doesn't need a foot sanctuary, even without knowing such a place exists?  Hope I stumble across another one in my journeys.

  Teahouse on the first floor, familiar and exotic brews, chilled, steamed and steeped.  Soups and cheeses too, plus chocolates and cookies so stay awhile upstairs.

  Downstairs, the lights dim, and in front of every overstuffed chair and sofa are enormous ceramic pots, generous for my size tens.  Some comfy chairs are tucked away in curtained corners for those shy about their feet.  Men and women.

  Healing massage at Soakology, not nail polish.  Omega 3 and flax seed.  Seaweed and spirulina mud.  Neem and date seed.  Deep lavender.  Maine woods remedy.

  Ayurvedic assessment and massage too, the ancient art of India.

  Longfellow Book Store is next door; one of many bookstores in this lively city with its popular library.

  Longfellow himself is in evidence too with tours of his childhood home on, you guessed it, Congress Street.  Fantastic gardens out back, another good Portland picnic spot with comfortable benches.  Even if history tours aren't your cup of tea, I'd recommend a Portland visit for the gardens adjoining so many historic churches, museums and homes.

  Might take a book of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poems to read in the garden.  "Evangeline" I remembered and tour guide James Horrigan taught me something new.

"Nathaniel Hawthorne had the idea for the epic poem about the Acadian people in Nova Scotia moving to New France, now Louisiana, and he told his friend Longfellow."

  "Longfellow wrote it himself and gained almost-instant fame," Horrigan said.

  Some friend, I grumbled to myself.

  The Wadsworth-Longfellow House is decorated with original furnishings and family memorabilia, not always the norm on historic home tours.

  Victoria Mansion, also walkable in the opposite direction from Harbor Hotel, is filled with 90 percent of its original contents.

  That means 1860 in an Italian Villa style for multi-millionaires Ruggles Sylvester and Olive Morse.  Lavish just begins to describe this place.

  Follow Portland's curves and angles, wide streets, promenades and water overlooks and stop often to taste the local cuisine.

  Talk to people too.  Mainers respond happily, sharing information and acting interested in their visitors.

  Don't really know what I expected on my first visit to Maine but it felt just right, like Maine should.

When you go:

www.VisitPortland.com 207-772-4994

www.MaineDayTrip.com 207-838-5275

www.PortlandHarborHotel.com 888-798-9090

www.soakology.com 207-879-7625

www.HarvestontheHarbor.com 207-772-4994


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Tour Portland's Freedom Trail markers and learn about the importance of the underground railroad, as an escape from slavery, creating one of several important hidden routes to Canada in the 19th century.
















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Hack Stand of Charles H. L. Pierre
















Abyssinian ChurchPortlandFreedomTrail04.jpg















Home of Charles Frederick,PortlandFreedomTrail05.jpg
Harriet Stephenson Eastman,
Alexander Stephenson














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Home of Elias and ElizabethPortlandFreedomTrail07.jpg
Widgery Thomas















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Samuel C. Fessenden















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Hack Stand of Reuben RubyPortlandFreedomTrail10.jpg
















First Parish Unitarian UniversalistPortlandFreedomTrail11.jpg
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Lloyd Scott















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Maine Day Trip will take you to each Freedom Trail location and provide additional self-guided information compiled by Portland Freedom Trail.  Include all of the historical landmarks in your private tour of the Portland Peninsula to create a robust, interesting and informative excursion.

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Where else but Maine would you find so many wonderful places to explore?
Rockland, Maine: A living gallery of art, architecture and fine dining
by Christine Tibbetts/The Tifton Gazette July 10, 2010 (permission by author)
tibbetts1@bellsouth.net

  In a series about Maine destinations, this trip is perfect before or after a windjammer sailing holiday.

 Nooks, crannies and peninsulas extend Maine's rocky coastline into amazing zigzags of discovery, perfect for seeing from a sailing schooner.

 Equally wonderful are surprises in two little towns harboring the fleet of 12 Maine Windjammers, historic all because of age or accurate replication.

  History lives on the schooners.  Art flourishes in town.  Little Rockland is a living gallery with welcoming art everywhere I went.

  You know how pleasant it feels to be in friends' homes, and like their art, maybe because you like them?  That's how Rockland feels in shops, spas, restaurants and storefront windows.

  Art everywhere, before you even get to the galleries and museums, and those are friendly too, not at all pretentious.

  What a shame it would be to sail on a schooner and hurry home; Camden and Rockland offer some of the best eating, art, reading, strolling and overnighting I've found anywhere, big or small.

  Don't skip these towns because you don't sail; wave your traveling buddy off to sea and explore the land.  Sailing and staying worked for me: six nights in Penobscot Bay on the Lewis R. French sailing from Camden, and three nights in Rockland.

  I've seen the Maine coast in paintings by Edward Hopper, but being here on that rocky coast and in the Farnsworth Art Museum, standing in front of five of the 27 watercolors he painted in Rockland in 1926 - now that's meshing art and geography.

  Winslow Homer painted Maine too, and now I love his schooner watercolors better than every since I could see some real ones a few blocks from the Farnsworth.

  Twelve galleries in this lovely art museum, great 19th century American art, and contemporary works too.  Wyeth artists painted Maine scenes too and the works of three generations of this remarkable artistic family fill a white-frame church building, its simplicity is perfect for the often stark paintings by N. C., Andrew and Jamie Wyeth.

  "Mother Nature made the rocks and Ice Age glaciers smoothed them," Mainers like to say.  People make these little towns interesting.

  Friendly, straightforward, polite it seems because they mean it.  I felt that all day, each day.

  "Rockland is grounded as a working town, and we want to keep it that way," says Cheryl Michaelsen.  For her, work is running an elegant 1898 Select Registry Distinguished Inn of North America.  Four Diamond rating, and her mother and mother-in-law make help-yourself-any-time berry pies every day.

  Unusual intersection of values?  That's Maine.

  "People in Maine don't have to drive their money, or wear their money," Michaelsen said.

  Those who spend some to overnight at the Berry Manor Inn choose from 12 big rooms and fabulous architectural features throughout the two-story Inn and adjoining carriage house, thanks to the original owner Charles Berry sparing no expense in the wedding gift for his wife.

  This is one of four Historic Inns of Rockland, distinctly different one from the other, equally offering concierge services via the friendly proprietors, fine breakfasts and environmentally green habits.

  That work-hard background included a lot of fishing, and the harbor in Rockland is a busy one, complete with auto ferry service to nearby islands.  Visitors vacationing on neighboring Vinalhaven Island appreciate the historic Granite Inn for its design simplicity and calmness, and because it's just across the street from the ferry.

  When granite was a key industry, as many as 300 schooners like today's fleet of 12 could have been in this harbor.

  Zack is the pet-friendly Granite Inn's Springer Spaniel, clearly a valued member of the family of Innkeepers Edwin and Joan Hantz.

  Loads of lobster boats work the Rockland harbor too.

  Steve Hale will take you out on his named Captain Jack's and I went; he's a first generation commercial fisherman, trapping lobster for 36 years.  Named to honor his grandfather and 11-year-old grandson, Capt. Jack's holds a max of eight.

  "No lecture, just close-up hauling and setting traps.  This is a working conversation," Hale says.  "A lot of people eat lobster and I want them to know where they come from."

  Good advice came from everyone I met.

  When the Schooner Bay cab driver taking me from the train station in Rockland to the dock in Camden said to be sure to visit the local library, I figured reading matters here.

  Bookstores I found in abundance in little Maine towns.  Busy bookstores in Camden and Rockland both, and they're only 15 minutes apart.

  Can't be certain but I suspect the libraries and bookstores and their local popularity could have something to do with the fact that conversation anywhere - restaurant server, bakery clerk, art gallery greeter, cabbie - was an interesting one.

  Cabbie after dinner one night even asked if we had enjoyed all the "aaht" in town.  Art would be the word in my town but in Maine you don't hear too many "R's."

  I didn't interview chefs this trip, but certainly ate their fabulous food.  People here prefer individual, locally owned restaurants so look for names like Lily Bistro, Rustica Cucina, Cafe Miranda, In Good Company and Amalfi when you eat in Rockland or Brevetto in Camden.

  Brevetto is Italian, perched on a fast stream overlooking a rushing waterfall.  Front yard herb garden where the bartender picked mint for Mojitos.

  Too cold my June evening to sit on the porch, but the fresh mussels tasted terrific inside.

  Next door is the Owl and Turtle Bookstore where I got a detailed map of the Maine coast to chart my schooner route; it's a five-minute walk from the dock where I boarded the double-masted National Historic Landmark after dinner.

  If you choose to sail from the Rockland harbor, here's a tip to relish.  Make an appointment ahead of time at the Rheal Day Spa.  It's just up the sidewalk from the pier.

  For sure a massage eases bunk bed kinks, but a hot shower is really, really important after days at sea.  Owner Rhonda Nordstrom gets it and she's happy to make shower appointments.

  Everything's recycled, paints are low VOC, floors are cork, even the nail polish is "green" with no toluene or formaldehyde.

  Nordstrom chose Rockland after 20 years in a successful Boston career, and she's not the only one.

  That set the tone for my holiday with successful people loving their chosen lives.  Sure is more fun than vacations in places with stressed-out proprietors.

  Limerock Inn owners P. J. Walter and Frank Isganitis call themselves "corporate refugees," replacing New Jersey with Rockland six years ago, and thoroughly enjoying their beautifully appointed 1892 inn. 

  Sue Kelly's another.  Registered nurse turned aesthetician choosing Rockland.  Understands meds in the beauty business and her husband is a chiropractor, sharing the same historic 1800s stagecoach building, once a stop for the Underground Railroad.

  Interesting energy to contemplate as I sought a facial with natural fruit products to counteract six days and nights in the winds of Penobscot Bay.

  Bettina Doulton changed gears too, leaving a big city investment career to open Cellardoor Winery.

  "Choosing to live here is connectedness, taking the extra minutes to share," she says.

  "That means family, economy, staff, friends.  Collaborating, working together gives this life a dense experience," Doulton says.

  Wine's available on her farm and others near Camden and Rockland.  Leave the driving to Chad Ridge; for $25 he'll take you to three, plus point out lovely views in this mid-coast part of Maine.

  All Aboard Trolley picked me up at the Granite Inn for the scenic drive to Savage Oakes, Sweetgrass and Cellardoor.

  In between tours, he books national acts for Rockland festivals, big ones for crowds of thousands.  Check out the 63rd Lobster Festival this Aug. 4-8 or the Maine boats and harbors the second full week every August.

  "That's all for giving back to community," Chad says, "which most Mainers always do."

  Gee, if only I'd found time to wander around Rockport Village, nestled between Rockland and Camden.  Or Bath where I caught the Maine Eastern Railroad.  Or Wiscasset where Norm Forgey who runs Maine Day Trip pointed out the abundance of antique shops.

  More Maine vacations needed.

When you go:

www.HistoricInnsofRockland.com

www.FarnsworthMuseum.org

www.CaptainJackLobsterTours.com

www.MeetTheFleet.com

www.VisitMaine.com

www.MaineDayTrip.com

www.SailMaineCoast.com









Six Nights on a schooner - Maine windjammers are better than a vacation
by Christine Tibbetts/The Tifton Gazette July 4, 2010 (permission by author)
tibbetts1@bellsouth.net

Heave ho mates! Unfurl the sail.

  I hardly knew my muscles strained, helping to sail a National Landmark schooner in Maine's great big Penobscot Bay, sunny, cold and windy in early June.  Credit the sea chants for mesmerizing me.

  Life on the Lewis R. French schooner built in 1871 to sail among the 4,000 plus islands of Maine's beautiful rocky, craggy coast is way more special than a vacation.
 
  This is living the history, not visiting a living history museum.  Sailing a Maine Windjammer put me inside the history on an outdoor vacation. 
 
  Ancient rhymes like "Heave Ho" morph the captain's commands into salty poems, fun to chant while pulling hand over hand to bring in a thick rope and change a sail.
 
  That is well boys, Capt. Garth Wells praises when tacking is complete.  We're all boys at tacking and jibbing time.
 
  Every sail adjustment, every lean and turn creates new scenes, and Maine is beautiful.
 
  During one of my afternoon dozes on the deck the wind eased, the sun warmed my fleece parka, and I woke to the sound of a harbor seal and sight of another tall-sail schooner!  Mine had two masts and this one had three.
 
  Victory Chimes is its name, America's largest passenger schooner and a National Historic Landmark.  She's on the Maine quarter.
 
  Alone on the water all day and then all of a sudden another windjammer.  Startling.  Not the kind of vessel popping into view when I'm on the Georgia coast.  Wondered what past or present I might be in.
 
  Windjamming is life an another era.  Living this history happens mid-May through mid-October on a fleet of 12 schooners sailing from pretty harbors in Maine communities worth a holiday visit themselves.  Camden and Rockland are the towns, and they're worth more stories.
 
  My boat was the Lewis R. French, the oldest schooner sailing in America.  Officially a National Historic Landmark made of native red oak and white pine with 3,000 square feet of sail.  No engine.  Silence, birds, seals and conversations.  Nothing mechanical.
 
  That's why I chose the French, and also for her small size with only 21 passengers and four crew.  Some of the windjammers carry 29 and 30 passengers.
 
  Now that I know the captain, he'd be another reason to book the French again.  Skilled for sure, plus exuding his own personal delight sharing a life under sails.
 
  Garth Well's love of schooner sailing is infectious.  I was a newbie to this outdoor vacation but several travel mates were repeaters, specifically choosing my vessel and captain again.
 
  He and the wind confer each day about the path to take; map this route as you go.  I was glad I had a detailed map of the Maine coast to follow along with a highlighter.
 
  Wells is almost breathless with awe and admiration of the experience every day.  Sincere, this fellow.
 
  "When I'm on the French thinking about passing the same waters and coastal lands her other captains saw 130 years ago, aah, what a connection.
 
  "She was built to sail the Maine coast, not the Chesapeake or other waters," Capt. Garth says.  "It's important to me to keep her sailing, still doing what she was built to do."
 
  Vacationers like me are the cargo now, but early loads were lumber, tin, mustard, bricks, granite, fish and lime.
 
  Nights are still, always anchored, often in serene quiet coves and sometimes in working harbors, getting off the schooner to walk a bit and leaving later than the lobster boats in the morning.
 
  What about the days?  Helping First Mate Ryan Downs and mate's assistant Amber Nuite only if we want to.  Sometimes I'd hold a book but really gazed at the splendor, chatting, dozing and eating heartily.
 
  Abundant farmer's market groceries filled nooks and crannies as we sailed: asparagus, broccoli, salad greens, peppers, fresh herbs.  Loads of flour too because cook Amber Dunn is a bread baker as well as server of three squares a day, plus hearty snacks.
 
  The clang of the schooner's bell signals mealtime with cook announcing the courses.
 
  At 6:30 a.m. she emerged from the tiny galley with its wood-burning stove to serve pre-breakfast food: hot muffins on the deck, coffee and water for many teas.  Every early morning a different kind of hot muffin, brimming with blackberries, apricots or something fruity, plus a big wooden bowl with grapes, bananas, oranges, apples.

  I was awake because the summer sun rises really early in Maine, plus I slept lightly, fearful of rolling out of my narrow top bunk.
 
  Lesson learned later about that fruit bowl: should have chosen more bananas to combat excessive dry skin caused by life on the water.

  "All those days on the water cause potassium imbalances and affect your adrenals," says Susan Kelly, registered nurse and licensed aesthetician who runs SkinKlinic Day Spa in Rockland.  "Eat more bananas and broccoli while you sail."
 
  Plenty were available on the Lewis R. French but I didn't know that bit of nutrition until exploring Rockland after the sail.

  Don't skip a schooner lunch---as if you could go anywhere.  Soup and salad takes on a new meaning on a Maine Windjammer.
 
  Sun-dried tomato basil bread and corn chowder one day.  Butternut squash bisque and cucumber salad with fresh dill another.  Goat cheese arugula salad with veggie pasta turkey tarragon soup.
 
  Some windjammers in this fleet of 12 serve meals at a galley table but the French celebrates the outdoors.  Balancing a plate while perching on a deck goes along with finding your sea legs.  Sometimes works, sometimes not so well.
 
  Maine lobster feasting required some row boating, anchoring the schooner to go to shore on a deserted island.  Crew built a fire and set up a serving spot with seaweed covering the sand while a bald eagle soared overhead.
 
  Passenger task?  Find two good-sized rocks to crack your lobster's shell.  Butter not clarified, but melted, corn on the cob with graham crackers, chocolate and marshmallows later for s'mores.
 
  Hiking around an Ice Age, glacier-created vacant island, including a walk through an immense meadow of ferns, and then savoring lobster with the windjammer in sight -- that'll take you to a thoughtful reflective place about what's good in life.
 
  The humpback whale calf breaching the Bay waters another day did too.  People see things on historic schooner sailings because they're fully there, in the moment.  No cell phones allowed on the Lewis R. French; on this boat folks talk to each other instead of texting elsewhere.
 
  Conversations varied where I sat: choose aft and hang out with the captain at his wheel.  Passengers knowing how to sail already tended to be there the most.
 
  Bundle up with extra fleece to perch on the windy bow; that's a solo seat.  Point out harbor seals and birds to each other with a spot port or starboard.

  Liquor's low key on this adventure.  Bring some if you like and Captain makes a spot to keep a beer cold, but for everyone on my six-night sail, alcohol was a minor, mostly nothing detail.  Maybe Mainers prefer Moxie, a regional carbonated soft drink.  Get your head straight before you sail.  Clear thinking about the quirks opens space to enjoy it all.  Worked for me.  Expecting hotel accommodations might make you cranky.

  Windjammer living is cozy.  My traveling buddy Syd Blackmarr called our bunk-bed cabin a "communal bedroom."  Seems the snores and sounds of new-found friends in the other four cabins off our tiny entryway wafted to all pillows.
 
  Pack earplugs, the soft putty kind that mold to your ears.
 
  Don't pack much else; re-wearing casual clothes is the way to sail.  Bring what you can hang on hooks.  This is not a dresser drawers or suitcase-on-a-luggage-rack space.  Three hooks and a small hammock to hold stuff were within reach from my top bunk with five hooks and a hammock next to Syd's bottom bunk.  Four hooks by the little sink and five more next to the door.  Plenty for airing out a week's wearing which ought to include wind-breaking rain gear.  I'd recommend a soft cloth sack to corral little stuff hanging on a hook.  Make sure your suitcase really is small or it won't fit under the bunk.  Water's hot in the one shower booth 9:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.  The hand-held nozzle shares a spot with the toilet but a curtain keeps the paper, your towel and clothes dry.  Quiet time by 10:00 p.m. and if you like to read in bed, take a clip-on book light too.  Exercise your knees before you go to be ready for steep ladders, the only way to your bunk, and safest facing backwards.

  Costs for the 12 windjammers range from $400 for some three-day sails to a high of $1,100 for some of the six-day trips.  Take a long one if you can to settle in, instead of arriving as if you were leaving soon.

  Leave some days to schedule a wonderful time in the Windjammer Fleet harbor towns Rockland and Camden, plus the airport city of Portland.

When you go:

Maine Windjammer Association
http://www.sailmainecoast.com
800-807-WIND
http://www.schoonerfrench.com
captain@schoonerfrench.com

Maine before and after sailing:

www.VisitMaine.com
888-624-6345

www.VisitPortland.com
207-772-4994

www.MaineDayTrip.com
207-838-5275

Rockland
www.HistoricInnsOfRockland.com/
877-Roc-INNS
  





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Historic Bath, Maine is a National Trust for Historic Preservation Distinctive Destination.  The historic business district is eclectic and quaint.  Unique architecture abounds.

Do not miss the opportunity to spend several hours at the Maine Maritime Museum and lunch on the river's edge.  This really is a unique destination where Bath Iron Works is building U.S. Naval ships at the same location that large sailing vessels were built in the 19th century.
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Visit the Kennebunks, which are alive with history, grand ocean views, wonderful restaurants and interesting shops.  Also, you will see many historic ship captain homes from the 19th century in this area.

Kennebunkport is a favorite destination for most first time visitors to Maine.  There are plenty of Maine locals and repeat visitors also enjoying a robust day of Kennebunkport shopping and eating fresh seafood.  Come join us at Maine Day Trip for a memorable vacation day in Maine.
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Cape Neddick provides an excellent view of this 1879 lighthouse and lighthouse keepers' house on Nubble Rock in York, Maine.  The Cape Neddick Lighthouse, also known as "Nubble Lighthouse" is a favorite location to pause and enjoy the sights and sounds of the ocean.

Also, a favorite place for your lighthouse viewing lunch is Fox's Lobster House and don't forget about Brown's Old Fashioned Ice Cream a few blocks away.  Maine - the way life should be!
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Portland Head Light, commissioned by George Washington, was first lit in 1791 and is located at Ft. Williams park in Cape Elizabeth, Maine.  This is the MUST SEE location for all visitors to Maine any time of the year.

Let Maine Day Trip show you other magnificent scenic and panoramic locations for unbelievable sights overlooking the ocean.  The autumn colors of extreme reds, yellows, and orange on the back roads will make a lasting impression on your and your friends in the fall.

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