Assateague Island – Day 12

What a great day to wake before sunrise and head over to the east side of Oxford for a direct view of the rising sun.

It’s nice and quiet here on a Wednesday morning outside the main tourism season. Just us, the birds, the Tred Avon River, and a growing satisfaction of the experience, this is all ours.

While she may difficult to see sitting there on the right, we sat next to the water for a good long time to enjoy this luxurious start of the day.

Back at the Ruffled Duck Inn, we were spoiled with an incredible breakfast of artfully arranged fruit, including honeydew, cantaloupe, strawberries, pineapple, and grapes. An omelet with spinach, mushroom, and feta with a side of small phyllo dough pastries filled with jam rounded things out. We are ready to take on the day.

We wanted to take the ferry from Oxford west over to Bellevue on the other side of the Tred Avon River, but we were too early. As we felt like getting out on our sightseeing adventure, we headed north and then south on our way toward Taylor Island.

Once we were on Smithville Road, surrounded by some luscious grasslands, we saw that we didn’t have enough map resolution to figure out which (if any) of the side roads we should venture down, so we circumnavigated the peninsula, skipping even more detours.

The Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad National Historical Park is out in the middle of all this, but seeing this has already been a detour, Caroline is excited for the ponies of Chincoteague, and I want us to visit Rehoboth Beach over in Delaware because the name is intriguing we forego the park during this visit.

The woman in an orange shirt was on a mission to save the orange turtle in the Blackwater Wildlife Refuge.

Bestpitch Ferry Bridge between Bucktown and Henry’s Crossroads appears to be the road less traveled. This is our form of winning.

This is not Millie’s Roadhouse in Vienna, Maryland, where we had lunch, but Millie’s is where we stopped. This place was along the road somewhere that could still be in Maryland, or maybe it’s in Delaware. No matter where it is, it no longer serves the purpose of sheltering people.

Georgetown, Delaware, is a quaint town on Highway 9 on our way to the beach. A Mountain Mudd Espresso hut came to our rescue as our eyes were growing heavy after lunch.

Dewey Beach in Delaware. You might ask, if we were in a hurry to reach Chincoteague, why would we head north? It couldn’t have only been the name Rehoboth that would pull us up here, could it? For the truth, see the photo below.

At how many state shorelines can Caroline step into the ocean? By the way, don’t get the impression that if she stepped into the southern shore of the state’s coast, she’d be satisfied; the more places along the ocean, river, and lake, the better.

Fenwick Island Lighthouse in Delaware could have been yet another valid reason to drive up this way. With over 700 lighthouses in America, it’s impossible that we’ll ever see them all. Turns out that August 7 is National Lighthouse Day, when many lighthouses across America are free to visit, and in New Jersey, just south of us here in Maryland, the state has reward programs for those who see a certain number of lighthouses on this one true important day in American culture.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Assateague Island National Seashore in Maryland

Two years ago when my mother-in-law was visiting exactly at this time of year, I blogged about our travel plans to do much of what we are doing out here in 2007. That trip back East, for some reason or other, was derailed but not our desire to see the places that we dreamt of. When Caroline was a girl she read the book Misty of Chincoteague by Marguerite Henry, and the idea of visiting the real place that actually exists outside of the imagination of the author is a serious treat for my wife.

Assateague Island National Seashore in Maryland

Seriously, think about this. There’s an island in America that is protected as a National Seashore because of a bunch of wild ponies that ended up here nearly 200 years ago. Now, those with the means are able to drive out here for a day of pony gazing, and those who might be inclined can even purchase a wild pony at the auction held every July when the ponies are rounded up and made to swim from Assateague to Chincoteague Island.

Assateague Island National Seashore in Maryland

If there’s a negative aspect to these fast orientation trips into America, it would have to be the brevity of time we can allocate to the most amazing places we wander into. Just look at this pony at the water’s edge with the glistening water framing the world in front of it: we could have stayed here forever until we moved 100 feet in either direction and caught ourselves mesmerized by the next sight. I wonder if there’s a part of us still out there watching this horse for eternity.

Assateague Island National Seashore in Maryland

Nope, no ponies here, but there is the matter of ocean in Maryland on Assateague Island.

Caroline Wise at Assateague Island National Seashore in Maryland

Trust me, she was out in the water, but this picture of Caroline was prettier, so I’m sharing it. If you look to the left behind my wife, you might get some idea of just how hard the wind is blowing out here.

Assateague Island National Seashore in Maryland

The few birds that braved this side of the island were being whipped around in the currents and seemed to struggle to stay aloft.

Caroline Wise at Assateague Island National Seashore in Maryland

Back on the Sinepuxent Bay side of the island, things are relatively calm

Assateague Island National Seashore in Maryland

Time to leave the ponies on the north side of Assateague and head south. On our way back through the park entrance, we stopped at the visitor’s center and met a girl who was also named Caroline. She was incredibly helpful and even entertaining as she explained horseshoe crabs and whelks and also did impressions of pufferfish, sleeping horses, and, by request, even a starfish. We certainly received our fair share of laughs for our stop-in.

Crossing into Virginia, which they say is for lovers. I’d say we meet that criteria.

Assateague Lighthouse on Chincoteague Island, Virginia, but it’s getting late and we are being eaten alive by mosquitos. We spotted a few ponies down this way, though nothing like what we were seeing up north.

Minutes later, at the ocean, the sky is turning stormy and gray as the sun is fully under the horizon. Nothing left to do but continue our trek south to Nassawadox, Virginia, for our night at the Anchor Motel that we are failing to find. It turns out that they changed their name to Best Value Inn years ago and forgot to inform us as we made our reservation sheesh. Dinner was almost at a Burger King, but after waiting forever with other people waiting longer than us and getting angry, we asked for and received a refund that allowed us to head across the street to a bar & grill that was probably no better than the worst Burger King on earth.

Longwood Garden, PA – Day 11

We were only about a mile from the Pennsylvania Stateline as we left our motel to find breakfast at Hank’s Place over in Chadds Ford. This is the land where the Battle of Brandywine Creek took place in the Revolutionary War back on September 11, 1777. First, some history and then breakfast. The Battle of Brandywine was fought by George Washington and General Sir William Howe, Lord Charles Cornwallis, and Wilhelm Reichsfreiherr von Innhausen und Knyphausen of Germany, who was backing the British. The battle was not only the largest of the Revolutionary War, but with combatants on the battlefield for 11 hours straight; it was also the longest. The Americans lost, allowing the British to take Philadelphia which at the time was the capital of the fledgling United States.

Out of war, we are catapulted into scrapple. What the heck is scrapple? It’s a kind of Pennsylvania Dutch spam made of pork scraps, cornmeal, and spices and then fried before serving. This, though raises the question of who are the Pennsylvania Dutch. Well, they’re not really Dutch but descendants of Germans from the Upper Rhine Valley in the west of Germany who spoke a West Franconian dialect known as Palatine German. This version of German is also the language of the Old Order Amish. Back to where this started: breakfast. As I wrote earlier, we were eating at Hank’s Place in Chadds Ford before I was distracted with all of the other details.

Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pennsylvania

Today’s major focal point is Longwood Gardens, the erstwhile country home of Pierre Samuel du Pont. While planning our East Coast vacation, a random gentleman told me of these magnificent gardens in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania. Researching the garden and its 1,000 acres, which include an old-growth forest that was saved by Mr. du Pont more than 100 years ago, I thought Caroline would love to visit.

Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pennsylvania

In addition to whales, bridges, shells, beaches, the sea, trees, the night sky, sunsets, mountains, art, and a bunch of other stuff, Caroline really loves gardens. Knowing all of this and working on her weak spots, I’m able to drag her deeper into love with this kind of sharing. You might think that sounds manipulative, but I think she might be getting one up on me as she knows these things are of profound interest to me, too, so maybe she’s feigning greater interest in order to make me love her more.

Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pennsylvania

Our oohs and aahs verge into the absurd as things unimagined enter our senses for the first time. When confronted with the spectacular, how are we supposed to respond when our vocabulary to voice astonishment demands expediency in uttering something quickly to let each other know that we’ve been gobsmacked by beauty?

Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pennsylvania

How does one glean any idea of what it might have been like for Pierre du Pont to find himself standing at this gazebo on any given summer day, talking with a friend and fellow industrialist about the economic state of things? Not only did he reorganize and modernize the du Pont companies, but he also played a pivotal role in General Motors as its president back at the time it was the largest corporation on earth. Caroline and I will gaze upon one more of the million sights in this garden today, yet Mr. du Pont was at home here and would simply go for a walk and maybe visit this same spot later in the day to take it all in at his leisure knowing it was all his.

Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pennsylvania

How people are allowed to explore their minds, imaginations, and ambitions when relieved of concerns regarding monetary fears and wandering an environment that lends itself to pondering is a luxury few of us humans will ever have the great fortune to glimpse. I’d imagine that the profoundly wealthy who might learn the real value of life can step outside the burden of their empires to walk within, but maybe I’m just projecting my own dreams and desires.

Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pennsylvania

When does the openness of our ability to find our own experiences lend riches comparable to those had by the likes of a du Pont or Vanderbilt family? Could Caroline and I consider that these jaunts into moments of radical freedom are the equivalent? Do the concerns of budget constraints necessarily put a dampener on our ultimate enjoyment? Maybe, like that bridge out there, we only need to go forward into our experiences with the hope of discovery to validate that we have crossed over to somewhere different, even if our perspective is still that of our own.

Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pennsylvania

As Mr. du Pont walked into these old woods he was helping preserve, the fact of the matter is he couldn’t see them any different than we are seeing them today. While his being able to be present here on a frequent basis is obviously greater than our own, I’d like to believe that if we commit the lesson taken from our eyes and other senses to bring this into our souls, we too are allowed to live within the memories of grand landscapes and evolving ideas.

Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pennsylvania

Prior to Mr. du Pont’s death, he founded the gardens with nearly $100 million to care for the place into the future. Now for a small cost for admission, we are all welcome to wander the property.

Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pennsylvania

Should you get the idea that there is too much here to see in a day or a few hours, you’d be correct. As is the typical story of our travels, this will have to act as a familiarization tour that piques our curiosity to add a return on a future visit.

Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pennsylvania

Interior spaces are as dramatically intriguing and beautiful as the outdoor areas on the property.

Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pennsylvania

The orchid section is a must-see area. I started dreaming of the membership benefits for people living close enough to pay weekly visits in order to watch the seasonal evolution of the myriad plants being cultivated here.

Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pennsylvania

You can rest assured that I took many more photos of the orchids and had a pretty good bit of difficulty choosing just which one I’d share.

Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pennsylvania

This space starts to feel infinite as everywhere we turn is another section of Longwood worthy of admiration. Like all days when we are out traveling, there are limits to how long our indulgence can last. By 1:00 p.m. we are back on the road and missing the garden.

This is the Walnut Green School in Greenville, New Castle County, Delaware. From 1808 until 1947, the school was in operation; it is now a National Historic Place.

We are visiting New Castle, Delaware, this afternoon. This small town was settled by the Dutch West India Company back in 1651.

On October 27, 1682, William Penn stepped ashore here in the New Castle area. In case you didn’t know it, Pennsylvania and Delaware were land grants given to the Penn family due to debts the British government owed William’s father.

While New Castle calls itself a city, with only about 5,300 people living here, it feels more like a village than the places I’ve visited and lived in that were called cities. This National Landmark Historic Village, along with St. Augustine in Florida, Old Washington in Kentucky, and Colonial Williamsburg, should definitely be on the list of places to see America as it looked at the end of the 18th century.

We are driving south from Kirkwood, Delaware, to Maryland, where we are heading out towards the Chesapeake Bay. As we were driving near a wetland, we spotted a bald eagle flying overhead holding a fish in its talons; sadly, there was no asking it to pause while we stopped the car to grab a photo.

The Old Wye Church in Wye Mill, Maryland. This is the only Anglican Church remaining in Talbot County.

There are more than wetlands out next to the Chesapeake Bay.

Of course, there is a lot of water, too. Sadly, there has been a good share of McMansions out this way, too, along with strip malls and all the deprivations that create modernity for those who want to see the natural beauty of the area make way for their lifestyle.

Meanwhile, quiet Oxford is still a quaint, almost remote respite next to a bay struggling to hold on to a way of life that is under threat. You should be so lucky to visit this small town to walk along the bay, have dinner at Latitude 38, get an ice cream at the Scottish Highland Creamery (they even have doggy ice cream), and catch some shut-eye followed by an excellent breakfast at the Ruffled Duck House. We did, and we look forward to the day we can come back and stay a bit longer.

Mystic Seaport Museum – Day 10

Seven years ago, when we first passed through this coastal town of Mystic, Connecticut, it was late in the day, which didn’t afford us an opportunity to spend any quality time here. We are rectifying that today.

A restaurant so small I’d say you’d be lucky to get a dozen people in this joint that’s appropriately named Kitchen Little. I had the Portuguese Fisherman breakfast consisting of chouriço (Portuguese chorizo) and linguica (Portuguese kielbasa) mixed with eggs, peppers, onions, and a jalapeno cheese on top of a Portuguese English muffin while Caroline’s breakfast omelet included fiddlehead ferns, a tasty veg discovery we’d never heard of before.

I’m happy nobody was with us on our walk through town and along the river when this drawbridge was raised for a passing boat, as we’d have embarrassed ourselves with our geek-squeals of delight, oohs, aahs, and general nerdiness that might be weird to normal people who live near drawbridges. This is the Mystic River.

The last time we were here at Mystic Seaport Museum, it was only 45 minutes before closing time; now we’re here before they open at 10:00 and are like kids going into Disneyland for the first time.

There’s a dilemma for me when entering any museum and that’s, where do I start? I want to be everywhere simultaneously and see the most important things first. That level of anxiety creates issues for me as I typically downplay the first things I see, knowing that around the corner is the real stuff. In the end, everything was worth seeing, and I often wish I’d spent more time exploring and examining the details of those impressions.

Then there’s the variable that asks, how long will it take to see everything? The answer is likely longer than we have to dedicate to this moment we’re out here. Part of my brain panics with the thought, but what if we never come back? Reality thought plays out with the good fortune that if we try to exercise some intention and desire to return, then we likely will.

The whaling ship Charles W. Morgan launched back on  July 21, 1841, and was retired in 1921 after 37 voyages over the course of its career. Lucky us as next year, the Morgan will be taken out of the water for renovations that will take nearly five years, but today, under beautiful skies, we get the opportunity to walk out on Chubb’s Wharf and walk on the deck and below of the oldest surviving commercial ship that is still afloat.

To our untrained eyes, the ship looks perfect, but then again, we cannot see what’s below the surface and how the structural integrity of the ship is holding up after being in the water for 176 years. In a world of replicas, simulacra, and simulations, it’s nearly unbelievable that this actual ship plied the waters of Earth, hunting whales and storing their oil below this deck.

Look into the rigging and try to imagine the people who crawled up the mast while at sea. They would be over 100 feet over the deck or more than 11 floors above the sea as they maneuvered among the 7,134 square feet of sail.

Below the deck are the galley, sleeping quarters, and storage space for supplies and whale oil. I can’t help but think that if the opportunity arose where a modern fleet of these old wooden masters of the sea was to offer adventurers to cross the Atlantic on such a craft, some of us would sign up for such a voyage.

While these try-pots are certainly a historic curiosity, there is also something very grim about authentic cast iron pots that were used to cook down whale blubber into oil. In some way, I feel like this is akin to looking into the ovens at Dachau that were used for cremating humans.

The Mystic Seaport Museum is a living treasure that reminds visitors that when the ships of the world came into port a full cadre of crafts and services had to be on hand to service the needs of the ships and their crews.

Plymouth Cordage Company Ropewalk was once the largest rope producer on earth, but after 140 years of business, the company shut down in 1964. The machinery and 1/3 of the ropewalk itself were moved from Massachusetts here to Mystic Seaport, where we can see the equipment and type of environment in which rope for rigging along with twine was made. For those with a keen eye, you can see that the process is nearly identical to making yarn. As for the shortened ropewalk, it used to be 110 feet long, which was needed by the men to walk out the fibers as they twisted them into lengths of rope up to 90 feet long.

This is the Fishtown Chapel that was moved to the museum in 1949. For a while back in 1900, it was used as a school but was then abandoned and sat decaying before being rescued and restored.

Trying to imagine the buzz around town when a whaling ship was seen on the horizon returning to its home base after being out at sea for two years. The spouses had to wait for the hopeful return of husbands and fathers who would come back to see their children having grown significantly older. With the masts towering 11 stories high, it would have been taller than everything in the area. At the height of the whaling industry, skyscrapers had not yet been built in Chicago or New York, so these ships would have been seen as incredible feats of engineering.

How fortunate America is that Mystic Seaport Museum also plays host to the Henry B. DuPont Preservation Shipyard, where the craft of keeping aging ships afloat and in working order lives on. We could stay here all day and maybe even a second full day, but with 245 miles between us and our next motel, we can’t linger too long, and with heavy hearts, we pull ourselves away.

Once again on the road, it was a brutal drive south past New York City – where we found ourselves in a traffic jam on the Cross Bronx Expressway that forced us to stop and crawl for an hour and a half.

We only had three miles to travel through this congested city, but it took 90 freaking minutes of astonishment and moments of claustrophobia.

Finally, we start to see the clutch of NYC release its grip on us. How do people do this every day?

Across the bridge in New Jersey, we fly in between beautiful wetlands on one side of the turnpike and stinking factories on the other. It was almost 9:45 p.m. when we arrived at our Days Inn in Wilmington, Delaware.

Whales, Walls, and Water – Day 9

We’ve already been out and about with a walk along Clarks Cove as the sun was supposed to rise, but the heavy clouds and rain cut that short. Back in the coziness of our room, I crawled into bed for a nap until our host, Ron, was ready with breakfast. Talk about feeling like royalty living on the edge of luxury; this is it.

Imagine it’s the beginning of the Civil War in 1861, and Melville published Moby Dick 10 years prior but is still struggling to be recognized as a serious author. He and his wife, Elizabeth, are walking up to this house, and there are no waiting throngs; celebrity is proving elusive, but in the future, long after this writer has perished, he will find immortality. Maybe it’s only the notorious that find fame in their lifetimes when it relates to the kind of impacts that change our perceptions.

The New Bedford Whaling Museum opens at 9:00, and maybe because others are still at church here on Sunday, we are the first of just a few people to be visiting the exhibits. The bones Caroline is standing between do not belong to a dinosaur; they are the jawbones of the sperm whale. If you’ve not read the book, Moby Dick was an albino sperm whale.

This is a half-scale whaling ship named Lagoda that was built nearly 100 years ago, long after commercial whaling had come to an end. For five years, Melville worked the seas hunting sperm whales on a ship similar to this, where he would have had to participate in everything from harpooning the creature to taking it apart and rendering it down to oil to light parlors across America.

New Bedford Whaling Museum

From the whaling ship, the crew would board whaleboats armed with a variety of harpoons used for killing the leviathan, as seen here from a replica, though I’m not certain that the harpoons aren’t real.

Around this time, we met a docent named Lucy, who happened to be here on her day off. We share with her our fascination with all things related to the sea, how we’ve been to the Monterey Bay Aquarium countless times, our visits to Coastal Oregon, the love of tidepools that we read Moby Dick in our car while traveling, and how all of this influenced our trip to visit New Bedford. Picking up on our obvious enthusiasm, she decided to share something with us.

Lucy went over to a locked cabinet, telling us how the things inside were usually shared with school groups as adults typically don’t find it all that interesting. What she took out and handed over to us was a sample of spermaceti, some sperm oil, right whale oil, and the treasure of all treasures, ambergris. Ambergris has a scent that is magical and beyond my ability to explain just what it is. As for Lucy, she’s originally from Poland which allows us the opportunity to discuss things European and acknowledge our perception that not many Americans seem to have a deep curiosity for the natural world.

We were not going to leave New Bedford without a visit to Johnny Cake Hill to at least catch a glimpse of the Seamen’s Bethel and the Mariners’ Home. I have to admit that we couldn’t make time to visit these iconic and historic buildings as we are on our way to Mystic, Connecticut, to visit the Seaport Museum that we didn’t have the opportunity to check out when we were in the area seven years ago.

Somewhere on the road in Dartmouth, Massachusetts.

The gimmick of a giant milk jug with a Holstein perched atop it worked to drag us over to Salvadors Ice Cream stand on the side of the road in Dartmouth. This is probably the quickest way to pull Caroline and me into a business; just dress it up in some kind of absurdity, and we’re yours.

Our interests seem to have no bounds, well, that’s excluding jazz, country and western, most sports, racism, and the will to stupidity; so beyond that, we are pretty much interested in most everything, including stone walls framed with dandelions on one side and blue sky on the other.

Get out and see America NOW. Believe it or not, this country is disappearing as it loses its identity to consumers of blind conformity. We visited Gray’s General Store here in Adamsville, Rhode Island, which has been in operation since 1788, but we are so far off the beaten path that, in spite of its authenticity, this historic business will likely never draw enough tourists to make it viable as those people picked up what they needed at nearby New Bedford, Massachusetts, or in Providence, Rhode Island. Meanwhile, the locals increasingly buy their goods on Amazon. Combine this with the need to remove our increasingly valuable old signage and weathervanes lest they are stolen, and the very appearance that adds so much character to these outings will one day be gone.

Caroline Wise and John Wise in Adamsville, Rhode Island

Sure, our faces are blurry but this is part of our proof that we were for a second time in our lives here in Rhode Island. It’s just crazy to think that Los Angeles County is nearly four times larger than this state. Strange that our last trip to this state saw Caroline as being blurry, and now we both are; what gives?

Add coastal Rhode Island to our list of desirable places to live.

The Breakers in Newport, Rhode Island

Apparently, some very wealthy people thought the same thing about the Newport area of Rhode Island, such as The Breakers seen here. While we didn’t have the time to visit this mansion once owned by the Vanderbilt family, we made a note that it might be interesting to one day visit the complex of mansions maintained out here by the Newport Preservation Society.

Castle Hill Lighthouse in Newport, Rhode Island, was our last stop before getting on it to head over to Mystic, Connecticut, where we had a room booked for the night.

We arrive in Mystic with the last bit of light offering us a glowing horizon that punctuates another perfect day. Our course today took us on a beautiful winding series of roads that kept us close to the Atlantic among farmlands and the summer stomping grounds of America’s elites of 100 years ago. The golden age of the American Industrial Machine was at its strongest back then, with the super-rich building a lifestyle that took full advantage of the countryside that was theirs. Today, we were able to have a brief glimpse of what was part of that appeal.

Going South in Maine – Day 8

How do you turn a 240-mile, four-and-a-half-hour drive into an all-day affair? You travel with John and Caroline. But if you do, be prepared for our flavor of crazy, such as leaving the motel at 5:30 in the morning. Waking to a clear sky and some brisk weather, we were prepared to indulge the senses with more Maine than was originally on the schedule and to limit it to a smaller area for the sake of taking in the environment.

We stayed overnight in Ellsworth because of its proximity to Bar Harbor and the Acadia National Park to the north, but on stepping out of our room, we decided that our first visit was enough and that we should explore new territory, so we headed south toward Surry, Maine which became the location for our first photo of the day.

As we continue to meander across the countryside, trying to balance hugging the shore using roads that aren’t always in the best place to capture glimpses of the larger bodies of water attached to the Atlantic and being aware that we have a destination we have to reach today, we come to Blue Hill, Maine. These little villages on the various inlets, bays, and rivers make it immediately clear why the Bush family is so enchanted with coastal Maine.

C&G Grocery in Sedgwick, Maine, is about the furthest we’ll head out on this peninsula today, though Little Deer Isle and the larger Deer Isle sandwiched between East Penobscot Bay and Jericho Bay are calling us.

Instead, we’ll continue our drive of exploration and consider those islands in the bay as places that will hopefully one day draw us back to Maine for a third encounter with the state. Further north, we were aware of how the land was just moving out of winter, but here we are starting to see signs of spring.

Castine comes into view and whispers in our eyes that maybe we’ve found one of the communities we’d like to spend some of our retirement in. The idealism layer we are allowed to drape over our perception to make a town or village into the image we desire is likely delusional, but it’s far better than looking at these bucolic locations through the filter of the angry side of the population who are frustrated by the lack of jobs. What kind of jobs do they often want out this way? Unsustainable ones that would destroy the seaside and pastoral appeal to those of us who are traveling as they strip the land of trees and drag every last fish and ounce of coal or oil out of the surrounding area.

Trinitarian Congregational Parish of Castine, Maine, was established in 1829 and proudly boasts of its Protestant heritage coming from the Puritans who left England to help establish the United States. The community of Castine also lays claim to being one of the longest continuously inhabited areas in North America, occupying this area since the early 1600s.

Dice Head Lighthouse here in Castine has been standing since it too was built back in 1829 though for decades now it sits decommissioned.

This small town is the epitome of a beautiful, if not perfect, seaside community. The population is tiny and gets even smaller as the local Maine Maritime Academy sees many of its students depart for Eastern Europe in early May aboard the training ship the State of Maine.

Heading up the coast on the Penobscot River, we spot and have to stop for this abandoned trawler that turns 70 years old this summer. Used originally as a fishing boat, it was acquired by the US Navy in 1942 and commissioned as the USS YP-414. Following the war, it reverted to its original name, FV Squall, and stayed in operation until it was removed from the registry of boats in 1977 and became a breakwater for the marina where it remains docked and rusting away.

Penobscot Narrows Bridge and Observatory in Prospect, Maine

We ate lunch at Verona Island’s Seabreeze Restaurant, which isn’t really important at all, but as we continued our trek south, we had to cross the Penobscot Narrows Bridge, which enchanted us with the feeling that we somehow knew this bridge. Getting home we learned that the cable-stayed bridge had just opened six months before and had been featured in the media as being one of the 100 best innovations of 2006.

Our second visit to the Purple Baboon in Belfast, Maine our first was back in 2000.

Add Belfast to the list of places we could call our summer home.

On the Little River in Belfast, just adding to the charm.

On Highway 1, we were driving along when I looked out to the sea and thought that might be a nice photo. Forget the sea view as I found this license plate from Maine that spells out VEGGIES. With Caroline being a vegetarian, it seemed like a sign from the universe that we are meant to be here instead of it just being a lucky find where someone lost a license plate off their car; that would be too simplistic an explanation. We dragged this back to Phoenix to hang on our wall as a souvenir of our time out here, seeing we couldn’t find anything else representative back at the Purple Baboon.

Chestnut Street Baptist Church in Camden, Maine, represents yet another faction of the Puritans as a separatist religion that was on its way to America to practice their flavor of fundamentalism back in the early 1600s. Four hundred years later, we’ve brainwashed ourselves into believing in a righteous form of Christianity to an extent that we cannot perceive our own radicalized beliefs, which, from my perspective, look a lot like Islamic fundamentalism. I resent these practices with a belief in some outer-space-inhabiting deity who is portrayed as a petty-minded bigot full of rage that casts unsaved souls into an abyss while rewarding whack jobs who propagate agendas of hate and intolerance with eternal life and/or virgins. Give me a break! Although I’ve got to admit that many religious buildings that celebrate their god(s) are amazing. Maybe we should pray to architecture?

Camden Marina plays host to vessels that should be ordained as holy craft as they shuttle the fragile souls of humans over the dark and mysterious seas, which have a fierce power to consume lives while offering nothing in the form of redemption. Maybe the sea is the real God?

Somewhere on Highway 1 on the way to Portland, I stop at my personal lord and savior who has set up shop in the back of the mobile church of commerce. I’m a Foodatarian who prays three times a day, sometimes five, in the direction of the dining table. On that altar, I crucify the body of the animal and vegetable before consuming their flesh as a sacrament. Sadly I practice some of the worst aspects of Catholicism as after consuming the soul of the meal that failed to accept me as the son of God; I banish it to a life in hell by turning it to shit and sending it into the darkness of the eternal sewer. Maybe that lobster stew will see the light and find my truth before it, too, must suffer damnation.

Last great view of the Maine coast before getting on the turnpike and cruising right through New Hampshire. I’m done with the religious stuff, well, at least until we get to Salem, Massachusetts, and we can start examining the religious zealotry that led to the burning of witches. Seriously, what the hell is wrong with humanity?

We should all go on vacation and worship beauty, pray to blue skies, and baptize ourselves in the waters of the sea for the sake of communing with the fishies.

You may have the impression that when we travel, we avoid large cities – you would be right. On this day, though, we intentionally made our way into the heart of Boston and grabbed a parking spot at the Boston Commons. Turns out that Boston really is a nice city, well, the little we saw of it. Diversity is the most obvious feature; history comes on quickly, and friendliness is just around the corner. Our tour was a fast one, with only two hours on the streets.

We checked out the grave of Paul Revere and tried to identify the exact spot of the Boston Massacre, which we were standing on, but the signage wasn’t very good (and it doesn’t help that this historic site is now a traffic island). For Caroline, the highlight would have been the site of the Boston Tea Party, but we couldn’t find it for the life of us – it appears the area is under construction and difficult to approach for the time being. A friendly guy on the street and his girlfriend told us how great Boston is and only felt sympathy for us living in Phoenix. Both had tried living in Phoenix but found it too impersonal and ‘cold.’ China Town is small compared to San Francisco’s, Washington D.C.’s, and Los Angeles’s China Towns, but hey, at least they have one.

Too bad we didn’t have more time to visit the historic side of Boston, but at least we are now intrigued and will hopefully find ourselves quickly returning to Beantown.

Our destination today is New Bedford, where we are staying at the Melville House Bed & Breakfast – right in Herman Melville’s old room; hooray for whales! After we checked in, we ventured into the old town and found some dinner at Freestone’s City Grill in a former bank built in 1872 that is part of the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park. Besides a dish of local quahog, you should know that Caroline also enjoyed a Whale’s Tale Pale Ale!

Arriving at night was a stroke of luck as under the cover of darkness, the charm of 1850s New Bedford seemed to still be alive. Cobblestones and old-fashioned lights with the architecture looking much like it must have when Melville used it as part of the story that was as big as a whale.

This might have been Melville’s room but might not have been, as nobody knows for certain. It is known that Catherine Melville hosted her brother here, but it is also true that it was well after 1850 when Melville penned Moby Dick and his sister lived here. No matter these small details as after Caroline read this amazing book out loud in the car to us over the previous months, we are simply delighted in this opportunity to dwell in the shadow of Melville and what he captured 157 years ago.

West Quoddy Head Lighthouse – Day 7

We keep doing this thing of renting cabins out of some romantic idea that a cabin in the woods is the ideal location to get a real feeling of things. The amenities that are in these places don’t really lend anything to our experience since the place where we lay down our heads and grab a  shower has little impact on the quality of our day. Having the opportunity to barbecue is certainly a benefit, and if this lodging is far removed from the bustle of a city, then it is certainly more desirable than an expensive hotel. On the other hand, a cheap motel typically gives us all we need, including a much cheaper price.

This was our place in Stockholm, Maine, and even though it was twice the price of what we’d like to pay, we still wish we could hang out a couple more days.

We weren’t gone, but a few minutes before, the glimmer of the sun that shone on our cabin gave way to heavy cloud cover, followed by fog encroaching on our day, but that’s a bit later.

A vacation in Maine wouldn’t be complete without a quick stop at Hubcap Heaven in Littleton. Now we own this experience too.

This quadruple mailbox in Hodgdon caught our eye and had us wondering how often someone manages to stuff something into the top two boxes or if the owner welded those shut to stop any potential shenanigans.

Just down the street still in Hodgdon is a shoe tree. After smelling a few pairs, I can advise you to think twice about following suit.

We checked out this fixer-upper with the seller telling us it is common in Maine for empty homes to take a beating over the harsh cold season but that this wasn’t anything handymen weren’t familiar with.

On closer look, the kitchen showed promise, and the refrigerator was solid. We’ll have to think about this and maybe shop around to ensure this is the best deal, especially because we were hoping for something closer to the ocean.

This home almost has it all, including a beaver-maintained swimming pool.

OMG, I don’t even know if this is real. If this old gas station were for sale, this deal would be clinched as everything to get a clean start here on the East Coast could fall into place.

The interior of the station is impeccable and loaded with treasure; it should be a museum. We drove away from Waite, Maine, and these antiques, trying to stay close to the Canadian border until reaching Calais on Highway 1, where we stopped at the Sandwich Man for lunch. Why is this important? Because they are breadcrumbs for us to follow again someday, that’s why.

Eastport was the easternmost ‘city’ we visited, and a good thing we did as a bright yellow and red building caught our eye and demanded we stop. Eastport is home to Raye’s Mustard, the very last 100% stone-ground mustard maker in America. We ordered five varieties after sampling a dozen and had them shipped back to Arizona.

Our next stop was Lubec, Maine – the easternmost ‘town’ in the U.S. The distinction here is a fine one, but we learned both in Eastport and here in Lubec of the pride of being the easternmost town and easternmost city. We will visit the town proper after going to the lighthouse as we are having a break in the rain we’ve been driving through.

On the shore of the Lubec Channel fed by the Atlantic, Caroline doffed her shoes for a brief walk in the surprisingly warm gray waters before taking a short drive to the easternmost ‘point’ in the U.S. That’s the Lubec Channel Lighthouse and Canada behind here.

West Quoddy Head Lighthouse was heard before it was seen as the foghorn was blaring through the heavy fog. With this visit, we have now been to all four corners of America, from Mile Marker Zero in Key West, Florida, to the Cape Flattery trail and overlook in Washington, down to San Diego near the Mexican border. Oh yeah, we have also been to the geographical center of the contiguous United States near Lebanon, Kansas.

We were not going to bypass Lubec, as just snapping a photo at the Welcome To Lubec sign didn’t represent a real visit. Getting a decent photo in the worsening weather left a lot to be desired regarding the photogenic nature of the place.

It was already late in the day when we left the area on Boot Cove Road that hugged the Atlantic with nary another soul out there. With the fog, our drive became quite mysterious. Merging onto Highway 191 we headed in the direction of Machias for dinner at the Bluebird Ranch Family Restaurant before aiming for Mason Bay Road that brought us here to Jonesport.

We later learned that Jonesport is the home of Looks Lobster, the very first lobster reseller in the United States, but it was the whiff of smoke we caught on the way that hinted at a fish smoker in the area and alit our sense of smell with aromas that were teasing us with the desire to sample whatever that was. It’s late, though, and nothing is open out here.

Somewhere out there, the bridge and the sound of frogs take those willing to drive into the abyss out to Beals Island. The island is shrouded in dense fog obscuring our view and begs us to try to figure out where we are and what is happening deep in the mysterious mist. In the bay, a tiny floating dock appears to be an outhouse, but what would that be doing floating in the bay? For now, the circumstances regarding this toilet of mystery will remain outside our realm of knowledge.

The world disappeared with fog so thick we could hardly see 10 feet in front of the car. Good thing it seems that nobody is out there. Shortly before 9:00 p.m. and early on our clock, we finally arrived in Ellsworth at the Comfort Inn we booked over a month ago for the bargain price of only $57.