Hiking and....

Hiking and....
A welcomed visitor on my last weekend!

Thursday, October 4, 2012

First Days in Acadia

Acadia National Park
Acadia....  dates back to a place in greece known as "idyllic place" or refuge.



Between 1901-1915 Acadia National Park was establish with the help of John D. Rockefeller, Jr, Charles W. Eliot and George B. Dora.  Rockefeller donates 11000 acres for park.



The Rockefellers... were indeed busy "fellers"!  Is it any wonder that I think of this place as my "Virgin Islands North"!  Hiking, biking, swimming, sailing, kayaking, cross country skiing, snowshoeing, camping, photography, painting, good wine, great restaurants, accommodations of all shapes and sizes and price ranges,  art galleries, funky little shops, museums, music, harbors, lakes, beaches, mountains with vies of the ocean!



John Rockefeller, son of John Rockefeller was very much involved in this park... as was his son, Laurence in the establishment of the Virgin Islands National Park.  I am privy now, to the fact that the establishment of the Virgin Islands National Park was not seen as benevolence in entirety by the natives of St John and perhaps if I dug deeper I would find controversy in the establishment of Acadia.  Never-the-less - we thank them for their efforts in saving these beautiful places for our enjoyment.  In a culture that keeps us racing... it may be one of the only things that can bring us back to sanity... nature's gifts are truly therapeutic!



This place is a Wonder Land and this week you can call me, Alice!  I have had a nice few days settling in and now have set up a very cozy little campsite at Mount Desert Campground (http://www.mountdesertcampground.com).  This is my very favorite campground with beautiful ocean front and wooded campsites.  No RV's over 20' which pretty much encourages tenters and quiet. I, of course, included electricity on my site this time for a little lamp and a heater!  Ahhh such luxuries but necessary with the brisk fall temps.


It has taken me a few days to adjust to just going slower.  I am coming down from a great summer but I did fill it with some hefty endeavors and so now... I rest.  I saved my bike tune up for the local bike shop in Southwest Harbor and just got it back today.  So I can now hit the Carriage Roads.  Rockefeller is also responsible for the development of the Carriage Road network in this park.  This is one of the attractions that people come for and leave remembering forever.  These are cobble stone road ways of rolling, moderately hilly,  terrain through the woods, slipping by ponds and streams, skirting mountains with magnificent views of the ocean.  NO motorized vehicles allowed.  How nice.  A biking, hiking , cross country skiing, treat!  I guess my two favorites bikes on the carriage roads are "Round the Mountain" which I assumed would be easy but turned out not only to go AROUND but go UP as well.  It was a long arduous ride but very rewarding!  My all time favorite is to leave from Eagle Lake parking area, skirt the side of Eagle Lake and then Jordon Pond  (http://www.thejordanpondhouse.comto end up at the Jordon House for tea or lemonade and popovers!  Another way to enjoy the carriage roads is to go by horse and buggy (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MiBY2V6tHqU&feature=related), which I did with my sister, Sally, since she could not really hike or bike them.  We got a wonderful bit of history while we were on our tour.  And the thing that most impressed me was the magnitude of the carriage road project with very little machinery and the fact that these roads require little if any maintenance because of the way they were engineered!  It made me wonder about that concept we cherish so "Progress"!


The weather has been a little rainy and so I have spent time in the Southwest Harbor Public Library, where I am writing this post.  Rainy day activities can allow you to stretch in directions that you rarely do when the sun is shining!  I am putting together this first blog piece to begin touring you around the island!  I put together a slide show and was unable to insert it in the blog... still working on some creative things.  However, this time, even though internet is still slow here, it is not as slow as it was in St John and so I am trying to take my own pictures this time!  

I went looking for some key dates about this place and I selected the ones that follow:

1604
Samuel de Champlain rediscovers Acadia and names it Mt Desert Island. The French and English begin 150 years of rivalry for possession of North America.  
1688
Canada’s governor to the Acadia region gives a land grant including Acadia to Antoine la Mothe, Seur de Cadillac.  La Mothe visits Mt Desrt but the island is not permanently inhabited for another 75 years.
1870
Almost all of the island’s first growth timber is exhausted.  We love to deplete things.. don't we?
1880’s
The influx of “rusticators” (those banished to the country) signals a change from farming and fishing to a service industry.
1916
President Wilson proclaims Sieur de Monts National Monument, which becomes Lafayette National Park in 1919 and Acadia National Park in 1929.
1920’-1940’s
The culture of the affluent in summer cottages reaches it’s hayday.
1947
Forest fire destroys 17000 acres and all but a few Bar Harbor summer cottages  A theory about this fire is that it actually made this environment recreate itself with the wide diversity that it now has!  
1950’s
The entire areas flourishes as a tourist resort.  And still does!

Hope you enjoyed this little introduction to Acadia.  

I will keep you posted!

No comments:

Post a Comment