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Did You Know...?

Maine

🏝️ Maine’s Islands 

Maine has over 4,000 islands, but only about 15 are inhabited year-round.

🫐 Wild Blueberries

Maine produces more wild blueberries than anywhere else on Earth, accounting for nearly all of the U.S. harvest.

🦞 Lobster

Maine produces roughly 80 – 100 million pounds of lobster yearly - about 90% of the nation’s lobster.

Unlike warm water “rock lobsters,” Maine’s cold-water lobsters are prized for its sweet, buttery flavor, large claws, and tender white meat.

🥔 "Potato Empire"

Maine was once the top potato producer in the U.S., with Aroostook County as its heart, until competition from the West. Maine remains a major producer of high-quality certified seed potatoes, ensuring disease-free planting stock.

🍩 Donuts

Maine's donut history is famous for Captain Hanson Gregory, a Camden native, who claimed to invent the modern ring-shaped donut at sea in 1847 using a pepper box lid to poke the hole, solving the problem of undercooked centers in "fried cakes". This invention, later taught to his mother, became a Maine tradition, with the state also known for its potato donuts, a legacy continued today by shops like The Holy Donut in Portland, which uses local potatoes for its popular, light donuts. 

🏛️ Quirky Museums

Maine is home to delightfully unusual museums, including collections devoted to cryptozoology, umbrella covers, telephones, sardines, and even Moxie soda.

🐧 Puffins

Maine is the only place in the U.S. where Atlantic puffins nest, and in the summer, boat tours offer a chance to spot these colorful seabirds.

🦔 Porcupine Islands

The Porcupine Islands once served as strategic hiding places for French ships and Prohibition-era rum runners. They were later named for their distinctive shapes, carved by glaciers, resembling a family of porcupines with rounded backs and pointy, pine-covered tops that look like quills or spines rising from the sea.  

 

There are five main islands known as the Porcupine Islands:

Bar Island: Close to Bar Harbor, often accessible by foot at low tide.

Sheep Porcupine: Once used to shelter sheep during fires, hence the name.

Burnt Porcupine: Known for its dark, charcoal-like rocks, resembling a burnt porcupine. 

Long Porcupine: The longest island in the chain, rectangular in shape.

Bald Porcupine: Cleared for grazing, leaving it bare.

Rum Key: A smaller private island sometimes included in the group, known historically for Prohibition-era rum-running.

 

 

 

Mount Desert Island

🏔️ MDI

French explorer Samuel de Champlain named the island “L’lle des Monts Déserts” in 1604, meaning “Island of Barren Mountains,” due to the bare, rocky, treeless summits he saw from the sea.

🌊 Frenchman Bay

Frenchman Bay got its name from the historic conflicts between the French and English, as French warships used the bay’s islands, especially the Porcupine Islands, to hide and ambush enemy vessels, leading to the waterway being known as Frenchman Bay.

🏛️ The Ovens & Cathedral Rock

Powerful waves carved sea caves known as The Ovens and sculpted dramatic granite formations along the shoreline. One towering rock formation that resembles a cathedral -giving rise to the name Cathedral Rock.

🪨 The Island's Granite 

Mount Desert Island’s quarries supplied granite for iconic American structures, including the Brooklyn Bridge and Washington Monument. Prized for its fine grain and exceptional durability, this stone was a cornerstone of 19th-century architecture.

 🚢 Shipwrecks 

The Island’s rugged coastline has claimed countless ships over the centuries. At low tide, remnants of some wrecks can still be seen, offering a haunting glimpse into the island’s maritime history.

 🏖️ Sand Beach

Sand Beach has a unique natural feature, the shoreline is not made of sand, but of pulverized shells.

👻 The Island's "Ghost Village"

Tucked away in the woods near Seal Harbor is the abandoned village of McFarland’s Cove. Once a thriving fishing community, it was gradually deserted in the 20th century. Overgrown paths and crumbling stone foundations now mark its forgotten history.

 

Bar Harbor

 🏷️ Bar Harbor’s Name

Bar Harbor gets its name from the visible sandbar that connects the mainland to Bar Island at low tide, creating a "bar" for the harbor; the town officially changed its name to Bar Harbor in 1918 to reflect this unique geological feature, which allows people to walk to the island. 

 

Originally incorporated as the Town of Eden in 1796, named after an English statesman.

✨ Gilded Age Retreat

In the late 1800s, Bar Harbor became a glamorous summer destination for America’s wealthiest families like the Rockefellers, Vanderbilts, Fords, Carnegies and Morgans.  They built grand seaside “cottages” here, transforming Bar Harbor into a luxurious summer retreat.

🔥 Great Fire of 1947

In October 1947, a wildfire burned for ten days, destroying 67 grand summer estates, five hotels, 170 homes, and 10,000 acres of Acadia—though the downtown business district was spared. This reshaped Bar Harbor, which made way for its quieter, more natural character today.

Acadia

🏞️ Acadia’s Name

In 1604, French explorers Sieur de Monts and Samuel de Champlain arrived and called the region Acadia, meaning heaven on earth.

 Father of Acadia

George B. Dorr devoted his life and personal fortune to protecting Mount Desert Island, donating land and serving as Acadia’s first superintendent—without pay.

 🌄Rare Landscape

Acadia is one of the few national parks where mountains, forests, and ocean meet in a single, ever-changing landscape.

 

🐎 Rockefeller’s Legacy

John D. Rockefeller Jr. donated over 10,000 acres, roughly one-third of the land that became Acadia National Park and, between 1913 and 1940, oversaw the creation of 45 miles of scenic carriage roads now enjoyed by walkers, cyclists, and horseback riders.

⛰️ Cadillac Mountain

It is the highest point on the U.S. East Coast and the first place in the country to see the sunrise part of the year.

 

Cadillac Mountain in Acadia National Park was named in 1918 to honor French explorer Antoine de la Mothe, sieur de Cadillac, who received land grants that included Mount Desert Island in 1688, although he only spent a short time there. Originally called Green Mountain (and Wapuwoc by the Wabanaki people), the renaming honored Cadillac as a pioneering figure, despite his later re-evaluation as a self-promoting "scoundrel" who fabricated his noble title.

 

The name was debated, with many wanting to restore the Indigenous name “Wapuwoc”, meaning “White Mountain of First Light,” as Cadillac had a minor role and misrepresented his titles.

Lobster 🦞

  • Lobsters were once considered poor man’s food and even used as fertilizer and prison meals in colonial times.

  • A lobster’s blood is blue, not red, because it uses copper (not iron) to carry oxygen.

  • Lobsters can regrow lost claws, legs, and antennae.

  • They never stop growing and must molt (shed their shell) to get bigger.

  • Some lobsters can live 50+ years in the wild.

  • Lobsters have teeth in their stomach, not in their mouth.  They taste with their legs and chew with their stomach.

  • A lobster’s crusher claw is for breaking shells, and the pincher claw is for cutting and tearing.

  • Lobsters can be right- or left-clawed (one claw is always bigger).

  • The chance of finding a blue lobster is about 1 in 2 million. (Yellow, orange, and even calico lobsters exist too!)

Female Lobsters

  • Female lobsters are called “hens.”

  • They can carry thousands of eggs at once—sometimes up to 100,000 or more!

  • The eggs are carried under her tail and look like tiny black or dark green beads, often called “berrying.”

  • A female can carry her eggs for 9–12 months before they hatch.

  • She protects and fans the eggs with her tail to keep them clean and oxygenated.

  • Once the eggs hatch, the tiny baby lobsters float in the ocean for several weeks before settling to the bottom.

  • A female lobster only mates right after she molts, when her shell is still soft.

  • She can store sperm and choose when to fertilize her eggs.

  • Because they are so important for the population, egg-bearing females are illegal to harvest and are often notched in the tail (a V-notch) so they are protected for life.

Natural Wonders of Acadia & Mount Desert Island

Acadia is a landscape shaped by ice and ocean. Beyond the famous summits are places where the island breathes, booms, surges, and whispers—sea caves, wave channels, glacial boulders, and cliffs where the Atlantic shows its full power.

 

 

Where the Island Breathes: Wave Caves & Surge Channels

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Thunder Hole

A famous natural inlet along Acadia’s Park Loop Road where waves rush into a narrow sea cave, compressing air and water and releasing it in a booming roar—sometimes sending spray high into the air. The sound can be thunderous, and the cave gurgles and whooshes as the ocean surges in and out. The best time to visit is 1–2 hours before high tide, especially with moderate seas, when the effect is most dramatic. Visitors should stay back, as waves can splash unexpectedly.

Thunder Hole Photo Gallery: AcadiaMagic.com

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The Ovens 

(Between Hull’s Cove and Salisbury Cove)

The Ovens formations near Hulls Cove in Bar Harbor, Maine, are a series of sea caves and cavities carved into rocky cliffs by tidal erosion, specifically located between Hulls Cove and Salisbury Cove. Known historically as a tourist attraction, these formations include Cathedral Rock and the "Devil's Oven," which are best viewed at low tide. 

Anemone Cave

Anemone Cave (Great Head)

A hidden wave cave and surge chamber near Sand Beach and Schooner Head where waves surge into narrow cracks and chambers, forcing air and spray back out with booming and whooshing sounds. At calmer times, sea anemones and other intertidal life can sometimes be found nearby.

The cave is tide-dependent and intentionally unmarked on park maps due to safety concerns and to protect the fragile environment. Access requires a steep, slippery descent and is only possible at very low tide.

Otter Cliff

Otter Cliff

 

Otter Cliff is a dramatic 110-foot granite headland along Acadia’s Park Loop Road, offering spectacular views of the Atlantic, nearby islands, and crashing surf. The vertical cliffs are cut by deep fissures where, during rough seas, waves shoot upward in plumes of spray like natural blowholes. Named for its history with sea otters (rarely seen today), it’s now a favorite spot for scenic stops, hiking, photography, and rock climbing.

Photo Credit: Greg A. Hartford, AcadiaMagic.com Photo Gallery

Schoodic Point

Schoodic Point

Located on the Schoodic Peninsula, the only part of Acadia National Park on the mainland and one of its most dramatic and least-crowded coastal areas. The peninsula is intentionally managed as a low-visitation, minimally developed part of the park and is about 75 minutes from Bar Harbor.Here, powerful Atlantic waves crash into rugged volcanic granite ledges carved by centuries of storms. The shoreline funnels water into natural basins and channels, creating boiling, swirling “wave cauldrons” where the ocean churns, explodes, and recedes in spectacular fashion.

Ocean-Carved & Storm-Shaped Coastlines

Monument Cove

Photo Credit: Greg A. Hartford, AcadiaMagic.com Photo Gallery

Monument Cove

Monument Cove is a picturesque, cliff-lined inlet in Acadia National Park known for its unique sea stack and rounded granite boulders. Facing east, it’s a favorite spot for sunrise photography and astrophotography, with dramatic coastal views in all directions.When the seas are active, waves slam into the cliffs and rebound in chaotic, powerful patterns, filling the cove with surging water and crashing spray. On calm days it’s quiet and beautiful; on rough days it becomes one of Acadia’s most dynamic and dramatic coastal scenes.

Schoonic Head Overlook

Photo Credit: Greg A. Hartford, AcadiaMagic.com Photo Gallery

Schooner Head Overlook

 

A scenic viewpoint overlooking Frenchman Bay. Although surrounded by Acadia National Park, the headland itself is private property, easily recognized by the large historic mansion at its tip. The name comes from the white rocky cliffs, said to resemble the sails of a schooner when viewed from the water.From the overlook, you can often see Egg Rock Lighthouse offshore, now part of the Maine Coastal Islands National Wildlife Refuge. A paved path leads to the rocky shoreline below, where you’ll find more dramatic wave action and great photography—especially at low tide.

The Seawall

Photo Credit: Greg A. Hartford, AcadiaMagic.com Photo Gallery

The Seawall

A unique natural coastal formation - a massive, crescent-shaped ridge of rounded stones built entirely by the ocean over thousands of years. Powerful storms pile the heaviest rocks at the top and smaller stones below, forming a natural stone “wall.” It is known for its soothing, rhythmic wave sounds rather than crashing surf.

 

Rocky shores and shallow tide pools often reveal starfish and hermit crabs, and some of the stones here are unusually pale. It’s a peaceful place to sit, listen to the sea, and watch the waves roll in.

Little Hunters Beach

Little Hunters Beach

Little Hunters Beach is a small, secluded cove on the southeastern side of Mount Desert Island, hidden from the Park Loop Road and reached by a stairway down to the shore. Instead of sand, the beach is covered in smooth, rounded, multicolored cobblestones—glacially formed and polished by powerful waves.

When the surf comes in and out, the stones tumble and clatter together like granite marbles, creating a unique and soothing sound. The cobbles also provide important habitat for small shoreline creatures. This is a favorite quiet spot for photographers and painters.

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Somes Sound Somes

 

Sound is a 5-mile-long, narrow, glacially carved inlet that nearly splits Mount Desert Island in two. Often called the only fjord on the U.S. East Coast, it is more accurately a “fjard”—a smaller, shallower glacial embayment flooded by the sea.

Carved by massive glaciers, it forms a classic U-shaped valley bordered by Acadia and Norumbega Mountains. The sound reaches depths of 100–175 feet and offers calm, protected waters ideal for kayaking, sailing, and boating.

 

Named for Abraham Somes, one of the island’s first European settlers, it remains one of Acadia’s most dramatic examples of the power of ice.

Gifts of the Ice Age: Glacial Wonders

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Bubble Rock

 

Bubble Rock is a famous glacial erratic perched dramatically on the edge of South Bubble Mountain high above Jordan Pond. Carried by glaciers more than 30–40 miles during the last Ice Age, this massive boulder—made of Lucerne granite, different from the local pink granite—was gently deposited here as the ice melted over 10,000 years ago.

 

Often called “Balanced Rock,” it looks as if it’s about to tumble off the cliff, but it remains stable thanks to its low center of gravity and the flat bedrock beneath it. The smooth, rounded Bubble peaks get their name from their glacier-carved, dome-like shape.

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Jellybean Glacial Erratic

The Jellybean Glacial Erratic is a distinctive, oddly shaped boulder near the summit of Cadillac Mountain. It’s a great example of how glaciers during the Ice Age carried and deposited rocks of different compositions onto native bedrock.

 

Like Bubble Rock and other erratics in the park, this boulder was transported by the Laurentide Ice Sheet and left behind when the ice melted. Its nickname comes from its small, rounded, jelly-bean-like shape, and it serves as a simple, visible reminder of the incredible power of ice.

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The Bubbles (North & South)

The Bubbles are two distinctive rounded peaks rising above Jordan Pond and famous for their scenic hikes, panoramic views. Their smooth, dome-like “bubble” shapes were carved by massive glaciers during the last Ice Age.

 

Geologically, the Bubbles are classic roche moutonnées—mountains smoothed and rounded on one side and left steeper on the other by moving ice between roughly 35,000 and 16,000 years ago. Today, they offer some of the most iconic short hikes and viewpoints in Acadia.

The Bubbles Photo Gallery: AcadiaMagic.com

Jordan Pond.

Jordan Pond

Jordan Pond is a deep, crystal-clear glacial tarn formed by the Wisconsin Ice Sheet during the last Ice Age. As the glacier carved a valley between Penobscot and Pemetic Mountains, it left behind debris that naturally dammed the southern end, creating a lake nearly 150 feet deep.

 

The pond is famous for its exceptional clarity (often visible to 60 feet) and its iconic reflections of The Bubbles. It is a protected drinking water supply, so swimming is not allowed, but visitors enjoy the 3.3-mile shoreline loop trail, serene kayaking, and a stop at the historic Jordan Pond House for tea and popovers.

 

The pond is named for the Jordan family of Seal Harbor, who settled the area in the mid-1800s.

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