Thursday:
In the morning we drove about 10 miles to the W side of Mt. Desert Island, and launched the canoe in Long Lake. Clear fresh water lake, warm water. Outside the Acadia Natl Park so surrounded by vacation cottages. Mostly small family cottages with floating docks. Many people out paddling on the lake, including rented and personally owned kayaks, and lots of canoes. Enjoyed the paddle along the E and W coast of the lake. Covered about 3 miles. Weather sunny and warm, light wind. Great canoeing conditions.
After lunch and a midday break we took the shuttle bus into the town of Bar Harbor, just to see what was there. Shops, restaurants, but also an interesting waterfront. A 2-masted wooden coasting schooner at the pier, and sailing out in the bay was a 4-masted schooner, the first one of those I've ever seen. Both are day charter boats. And they are hiring crew, full or part time, will train. Anyone interested?
We drove to the park visitor center and got on the bike for a circuit of the park's 22-mile scenic loop road. Had ridden the route by bus yesterday, but that was in the fog, so the view was new to us and made for a spectacularly beautiful ride. Some climbing, which slowed down our average speed, and that began to cause me concern: we'd waited until late in the day for the infamous traffic congestion to thin out. That worked as planned, but I was worried about losing daylight. We have a tail light, but the road is narrow and winding and I had no desire to ride in the dark. So while we were enjoying the view we were also racing the phantom opponent of darkness. I had already decided if we lost that race we'd just stop and try to flag down a lift. It was a vigorous ride. In the end, the last few miles were mostly a fast downhill, and we got back to the car six minutes before sunset. We gave each other a high five and headed for a pizza dinner out, feeling pretty pleased with ourselves. A good ride for a couple of old coots.
Friday:
This morning we took the bike on the park's carriage roads. John D. Rockefeller, Jr. wanted to ride horses and carriages on the island where he had a huge summer "cottage", so he paid to have built a 45-mile system of carriage roads from 1905 to 1940, designed by landscape architects to blend into the surroundings. The roads are now the beneficiaries of an $8 million endowment for maintenance, raised by Friends of Arcadia. There's a lot of money in this area. The roads are not paved, but are carefully groomed and compacted crushed gravel. We were hesitant to ride them on our road tandem bike with 28mm tires, but they turned out to be great riding. We rode at a liesurely pace for two hours through woods, up and down gentle hills, and around lakes. Thank you, Mr. Rockefeller.
Set out on a hike this afternoon but S's hip was acting up and we cut it short. Back to camp for some relaxation and laundry time.