Take a Road Trip to Explore Maine s Blue Hill Peninsula
Take a Road Trip to Explore Maine’s Blue Hill Peninsula Road Trips
It’s best to make the drive between Memorial Day and mid-October, though some businesses close before autumn’s color show begins in late September. Know that lodging isn’t all that budget -friendly on the Maine coast. Expect to pay more than $100 a night at few-frills motels and more than $200 at cozy country inns. Accessibility: The terrain (including sidewalks) is often uneven. Many of the country inns, restaurants and buildings with shops predate the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), a civil rights law guaranteeing that individuals with disabilities have the same opportunities as everyone else. So no accommodations offer full ADA compliance, and entry to most buildings requires at least a few steps. The closest mobility-accessible accommodation is the Comfort Inn Ellsworth-Bar Harbor, 21 miles east of Prospect. With minor modifications to the itinerary, you can use it as a base for day trips. Join today and save 25% off the standard annual rate. Get instant access to discounts, programs, services, and the information you need to benefit every area of your life. Eifel Kreutz/Getty Images
Back on Route 176, you will soon come upon Buck’s Harbor, the village made famous by the beloved children’s book One Morning in Maine, by Robert McCloskey. The book’s Condon’s Garage still exists, and there’s a gently updated general store, Buck’s Harbor Market, with prepared foods and picnic fixings. About 3 miles down the road, turn left on Route 175 and look for Makers’ Market Shop and Studio, which sells locally crafted textiles, art glass, pottery, jewelry and other irresistible works at mostly affordable prices. Continue for about 4 miles, turning right onto 176 and right again in a mile at the T intersection. In about 2 miles, turn left on State Route 15 and continue for about 4 1/2 miles to Blue Hill, your base for two nights.
For dinner, dine on seared Blue Hill Bay sea scallops and Gulf shrimp or crispy roasted duckling at Arborvine. Where to stay: The Blue Hill Inn has 11 antiques-filled rooms (including three on the first floor) in the main inn and two contemporary ground-floor suites in the adjacent Cape House. Portable grab bars and shower seats are available, and the innkeepers will assist guests up the four steps into the inn and with luggage. Moe Chen Photography/Getty Images Brooklin
Spend Four Days Discovering Maine s Scenic Blue Hill Peninsula
Visit galleries hike remote trails go bird-watching take in glorious views stay at quaint country inns and more
Getty Images/AARP Splashed with waterways, speckled with fir-trimmed islands, scented with brine and pine, and edged with granite, Maine’s Blue Hill Peninsula and bridge-tethered Deer Isle dangle into the Atlantic Ocean east of Camden and west of Mount Desert Island. Spend four days meandering through this eye-candy region via two-lane roads that ebb and flow with the coastline, passing lakes and ponds, weaving through woodlands, and crossing bridges and causeways. Along the way, soak in the abundance of natural beauty, dreamy seascapes, rich history, trail-laced preserves and abundant galleries, and perhaps visit a remote section of . Don’t worry about crowds; despite all the natural attractions, the region remains largely off the beaten tourist path.It’s best to make the drive between Memorial Day and mid-October, though some businesses close before autumn’s color show begins in late September. Know that lodging isn’t all that budget -friendly on the Maine coast. Expect to pay more than $100 a night at few-frills motels and more than $200 at cozy country inns. Accessibility: The terrain (including sidewalks) is often uneven. Many of the country inns, restaurants and buildings with shops predate the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), a civil rights law guaranteeing that individuals with disabilities have the same opportunities as everyone else. So no accommodations offer full ADA compliance, and entry to most buildings requires at least a few steps. The closest mobility-accessible accommodation is the Comfort Inn Ellsworth-Bar Harbor, 21 miles east of Prospect. With minor modifications to the itinerary, you can use it as a base for day trips. Join today and save 25% off the standard annual rate. Get instant access to discounts, programs, services, and the information you need to benefit every area of your life. Eifel Kreutz/Getty Images
Day 1 Boston to Castine 230 miles
From Boston, head to Prospect via Interstate 95, the Maine Turnpike, Maine Route 3 and U.S. Route 1. If the weather’s clear, visit the Penobscot Narrows Bridge and Observatory at the Fort Knox Historic Site. A glass-walled observatory caps the bridge and delivers spectacular gull’s-eye coastal views (especially in autumn). Continue 3 miles north on Route 1, then take State Route 166 into , which juts into Penobscot Bay. This charming town delights history and architecture buffs with its Maine Maritime Academy, handful of shops and galleries, two small but excellent museums, a lighthouse and historic sites. All are within strolling distance of one another. Dining harborside on the deck at Dennett’s Wharf, enjoy a seaside symphony of waves lapping, seabirds crying and sailboat masts pinging while you sip a Maine craft beer and slurp briny local oysters. You’ll likely save a few bucks; seafood along the Maine coast typically costs less, though prices fluctuate with market conditions. Where to stay: Nestled on a bluff in Castine, the Pentagöet Inn & Wine Bar has 1 7 rooms split between an 1894 Queen Anne Victorian-style main inn and the adjacent Perkins House, a 1791 Federal-style home. Book early if you’re mobility impaired; there are no elevators and only two rooms are on the ground floor (in Perkins, with seven steps leading into the building). Jumping Rocks/Getty Images CastineDay 2 Castine to Blue Hill 51 miles
From Castine, the route shadows the Bagaduce River and wraps around tidal Northern Bay. Keep right where the highways intersect, following Route 166 to 166A to State Routes 199 and 175 , and turning right following signs for Holbrook Island Sanctuary and State Route 176. Continue on 176, passing a barn bakery that turns out breads and pastries, blueberry barrens that become scarlet in autumn, and don’t-blink villages. After about 7 miles, at the Cape Rosier sign, turn right for a scenic, counterclockwise 14-mile loop (with two gravel sections passable by cars). On the loop, self-tour Four Seasons Farm, owned by organic guru Eliot Coleman and his wife, Barbara Damrosch, of PBS’ Victory Garden. Here you can buy fresh veggies and produce on Saturdays. Beyond that is the Good Life Center, established by simple-living advocates Scott and Helen Nearing. Their book Living the Good Life influenced a generation of back-to-the-landers. You can visit the Nearings’ home and gardens and walk the trails from mid-June to Labor Day, and then weekends through early October. After passing through the Harborside enclave, spend time in , which has easy hiking trails, a shorefront picnic area, and in spring and fall.Back on Route 176, you will soon come upon Buck’s Harbor, the village made famous by the beloved children’s book One Morning in Maine, by Robert McCloskey. The book’s Condon’s Garage still exists, and there’s a gently updated general store, Buck’s Harbor Market, with prepared foods and picnic fixings. About 3 miles down the road, turn left on Route 175 and look for Makers’ Market Shop and Studio, which sells locally crafted textiles, art glass, pottery, jewelry and other irresistible works at mostly affordable prices. Continue for about 4 miles, turning right onto 176 and right again in a mile at the T intersection. In about 2 miles, turn left on State Route 15 and continue for about 4 1/2 miles to Blue Hill, your base for two nights.
For dinner, dine on seared Blue Hill Bay sea scallops and Gulf shrimp or crispy roasted duckling at Arborvine. Where to stay: The Blue Hill Inn has 11 antiques-filled rooms (including three on the first floor) in the main inn and two contemporary ground-floor suites in the adjacent Cape House. Portable grab bars and shower seats are available, and the innkeepers will assist guests up the four steps into the inn and with luggage. Moe Chen Photography/Getty Images Brooklin