Thursday, September 5, 2013

Once more getting ready to move down the coast.

We've been having a good time the last several days.  We had a nice visit from Tom, Karen's husband, who joined the festivities.  The weather has been changing, we've had some rain and fog and beautiful days, not to say the rain and fog can't be beautiful as well.  Something about the rocky Maine coast in the fog is very alluring.  And sometimes it's nice to hunker down with a hot cup of coffee and just watch the rain pour down.  We are moving all of 60 miles down to Scarborough today, just south of Portland.  We expect to get real cell phone coverage again, amazing how dependent you become especially when you don't have it.  It frustrates all of us that right here in the eastern US the coverage is so spotty!

We have been enjoying the food, especially lobster rolls.  Lobster prices are at their lowest level since 1994, so we are doing all we can to keep the economy moving.  We found an unusual blog about, can you believe it, lobster rolls?  It is called Lobster Gal, and it's been an interesting find.  To think that some one has personally tested, tasted, over 140 rolls, and can differentiate between them is hard to comprehend.  But, she believes the number 2 spot is a tie between Five Islands Lobster Company and Boothbay Lobster Wharf located right here, so how could we pass that up??  We found out that after Labor Day Five Islands is only open on the weekend, so that wouldn't work.  We preferred to go there since we knew it was an absolutely gorgeous place that we had visited in our sailboat a million years ago.  We had eaten and raved about Red's Eats and couldn't imagine a roll that could be any better.  Off we went.
Boothbay Lobster Wharf waiting for everyone

Not a bad view while you eat, huh?
What did we think, well it was very, very good, but none of us could say that it was better or worse than Red's, so I guess it means that writing a lobster roll blog should be left to the experts?

The rainy days made for some awesome views as we rode around the coastline.
Calm and serene

Beautiful
We took a ride to Pemaquid Point Lighthouse, this was a special place for Jan, Karen, and Nancy.  They have a lot of nice memories being there with their parents, Vern and Viv, when they were kids.  Pleasant memories came flooding back as we walked around and up the lighthouse.
Pemaquid Point Lighthouse

Rocky point


Looking up

The headland from above

Coming back down

Conferring whether the tide is coming in or out
it was going out
The lighthouse was commissioned by John Quincy Adams in 1827 and first built that year.  Unfortunately they used salt water and it crumbled and was rebuilt in 1835.

I have included a few photos Jan took as we traveled about.  It surely is a gorgeous coast!
Low tide

What a spot for a home!

Picture perfect
A disgruntled wet seagull on our sunroof.
Let me in!
Jan and I decided to go for a hike rather than walk anymore in the campground.  It is pretty and there is plenty of room for a walk here, but it is straight up and down hill, a little of that is good, but after 3 days of it, we, or maybe I should say I, had had it.  So I found a pretty little 2 mile hike through the woods to do instead.


Jan is leading the way

Wildcat Creek
So that's what we've been up to, and off we go in the pouring rain.


No comments: