Friday, May 30, 2025

Hampton Falls, NH - Richmond, ME - Trenton, ME

 May 15 - 30, 2025

On Friday, May 16 we drove to Wakeda Campground in Hampton Falls, NH for 6 nights.

We had a full hookup, back in site that was very nice with a wooded area out our back window.  It was $64 per night.  It rained quite a bit and there wasn't much to do in the area.  We forgot to take a picture.

We did take a drive along the shore.

We also went to Fort McClary.

The land has been used as a defensive position since 1689, and was deactivated in 1918.  If you're interested here's a good website to learn about the fort - https://northamericanforts.com/East/Maine/Fort_McClary/history.html

There was a pretty lighthouse and keeper's house on an island.

On Thursday, May 22, we drove to Augusta/Gardiner KOA Journey in Richmond, ME for 5 nights.

It was a pull through with full hookups for $75.01 per night.  Again, it rained a lot and there wasn't a whole lot to do around there.


We did go to Freeport and took a tour of Wilbur Candies.  It was an interesting tour ($6 each) and we got some samples of the candy as well as bought some.  It was good but not the best chocolate I've ever had.

Then we went to L. L. Bean and went through most of the stores.  They have so much merchandise there that they have four different buildings, plus the outlet store.  John bought a pair of much needed slippers at the outlet but I didn't buy anything.  It was fun just to see everything.

On Tuesday, May 27 we went to Trenton, ME, just north of Bar Harbor and Acadia National Park.  We're at the Timberland Acres RV Park for 10 nights.

It's a pull through with full hookups for $65.40 per night.  We were going to leave earlier, but Michael, JoAnn and Jack are coming up next week so we extended our stay.

On Wednesday we took the Lulu Lobster Boat Tour.  It was outstanding!  Our captain was a licensed lobster fisherman, and our guide, Galen, was very knowledgeable.  They were able to show us how they bring up the traps and how they decided if the lobsters are keepers or not.  They have to be between a certain length - too small or too big and they go back into the ocean.  If they have eggs or a notch on their tails they are females and they go back in.  The notches are put on when a lobsterman catches a lobster with eggs.  Then anyone else that catches that lobster knows it's a female and can't be kept.  FYI - we took the 9:00 tour on a weekday and there were only a dozen other people on the boat so we could move around and get up close to and touch the lobsters.  The 11:30 boat after ours looked much more crowded.

Each trap has a 'kitchen', where a bait bag (usually rotten herring) is, and a 'parlor', which is another opening in the trap where the lobsters can go.  You can see the little rectangle on the front of the trap that will allow smaller lobsters to get out.

Fortunately for this guy he was too small and went back overboard.

This lobster was doing some fishing of his own.

This is the gauge they use to measure the lobsters.  I was reading the book "The Secret Life of Lobsters" since I knew we were coming here and that made it so much more interesting.

We also went out and around Egg Rock.  All the lighthouses these days are automated so no lightkeepers are needed.  They still blow the foghorns though.

The coast and islands around here are very rugged.  There were seals and their pups but they were too far away and I didn't get a good picture.

After our tour we went to Bar Harbor Inn and had a lobster roll for lunch.  I can't remember having lobster before, and John only had it in Hawaii decades ago.  The texture was different than I thought it would be, even though I should have known it would be similar to shrimp.  We've had our Maine lobster and we're good.

The view from our table.

After lunch we went into Acadia National Park and did the loop road.  Even though it was a Wednesday it was still busy at the trailheads and sights.

Along the loop road.

One of the Rockefeller bridges.  They're all different along the carriage road, and all the ones we saw are very pretty.

A panorama at one of the overlooks.

This bridge was curved.

Yes, we're still in Dunkin Donuts country.  It seems like there's one everywhere!

On Friday we went around the "quiet side" of the island, west of Somes Sound.  We have the GuideAlong guides that directed us along the route as to things to see and do.  We get a lot more out of the drive than if we just drove.  This was a natural seawall that developed in the storms.  The smaller rocks are called cobble, and that's where the baby lobsters hide offshore until they get bigger.

We stopped at the Bass Harbor Head Lighthouse.

The fog was just burning off and we could hear a foghorn buoy but couldn't see it.


View from the path to the lighthouse.

We then went back to Bar Harbor and took the guide tour on the area west of the loop road and east of Somes Sound.  There are some very pretty lobster fishing villages, but I didn't get a pictures because the truck is big and there aren't many places to pull over.

It's supposed to rain tomorrow so we'll stay in.

In a few days we'll be...

Roving on...

For this is what the LORD says, He who created the heavens (He is the God who formed the earth and made it, He established it and not create if as a waste place, but formed it to be inhabited): "I am the LORD, and there is no one else."  Isaiah 45:1




Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Littleton - Boston - Lexington - Concord, MA

 May 11 - 14, 2025

On Friday, May 9 we drove to Spacious Skies Minute Man Campground in Littleton, MA for seven nights.  It's a beautiful wooded campground, 50 amp full hookups for $67 per night.  I got the 'stay 6, get 7' nights deal.  The owners are super nice and gave us helpful information about how to get into Boston on the subway.  There is some road noise but the campground is really quiet.

Site #80

View from the back window.

View out the side window.

As you may recall, we don't usually go into cities, but we made an exception this time because neither one of us has been, except John was there decades ago on business and didn't get to see anything.  The Lord gave us a beautiful day, so on Monday we got up early, drove to the Alewife Station (Alewife is a fish in case you're wondering) and caught the "T" to Boston.  We changed trains a couple of times and came out by the City View Trolley Tours (hop on, hop off) starting point.  We got off at the next stop to see the following:

Paul Revere's house.  It's hard to stand there and believe that someone who lived so long ago and helped make this a country lived in a house that's still there.  There is so much history here!

We didn't do the whole Freedom Trail but did get a good portion of it.


Paul Revere's statue.  He didn't go riding around saying "The British are coming, the British are coming" because back then everyone was British!  Instead he rode to the places he knew there were Patriot supporters and quietly said "The Regulars are coming".

Paul Revere Mall.  Along the wall they had plaques telling about the Patriots.

This plaque is hard to read.  It says:
PAUL REVERE
1735 - 1818
Patriot, Master Craftsman, Good Citizen
Lanterns hung in the "North Church Steeple" gave the signal to spread the alarm that the British were advancing, April 18, 1775, to capture the military stores in Concord.  Christ Church overlooking this ground is now known as the Old North.

"On the opposite shore walked Paul Revere
A glimmer and then a gleam of lights
A second lamp in the belfry burns.
And so through the night went his cry of alarm
To every Middlesex village and farm-
Through all our history to the last.
In the hour of darkness and peril and need.
The people will waken and listen to hear the midnight message of Paul Revere."

Born on Hanover Street, lived in North Square, established his bell foundry on Foster Street, and died on Charter Street.

Paul Revere wasn't the only rider to warn the Patriots.  Revere crossed the Charles River and took one road, while William Dawes took a southern route.  In Lexington they met Samuel Prescott, who was going home.  He joined them in spreading the word.  But at 1am a British patrol surprised them and captured Revere.

There was also one for Benjamin Franklin.



We got back on the trolley and went across the Charles River to the USS Constitution.  When I made the trolley reservations I didn't realize the the Constitution is closed on Mondays, so we went to the Constitution Museum in case we decided not to come back and see the Constitution.

U.S.S. Constitution
You can't get close to it when it's not open.


Where the ship was repaired several times over the centuries.

Dry Dock #1

We back on the trolley and then got off near Faneuil Hall and Quincy Market.  We walked through Quincy Market and back again looking for something to eat (and that I could eat) and ended up at Bread O' Life Bakery.  We both ordered chicken salad wraps and they were the blandest chicken salad I've ever had.  When we sat down on a bench outside to eat there was a Marguaritaville Restaurant right next to us and they had lunch specials.  We could have spent about the same amount of money and had a decent meal.  Live and learn!

Samuel Adams statue in front of Quincy Market.


Old State House with the Boston Massacre site memorial in front.

We got back on the trolley, not realizing the the Old Granary Burying Ground wasn't that far from the stop.  We rode the trolley back to the start.  I wouldn't recommend this trolley company and it was pretty expensive.  When you look at a map of the historic places it looks like they're farther apart than they area.  We had three different drivers and two of them were pretty good, the other one talked about restaurants and traffic.  You can walk everywhere (except if you didn't want to walk all the way to the USS Constitution you could take a bus).  We saw several walking tours, but unless you want a lot of detailed information you can pretty much do it on your own.  They do have some self-guided walking tours but I didn't check those out.  So after we got off the trolley at the first stop we walked back to the burying ground.


Granary Burial Ground


Burial Ground

Samuel Adams

Paul Revere

John Hancock

Benjamin Franklin

We took the subway back to the parking garage and drove back to the campground.  John had over 10,000 steps and I had over 9,000.

On Tuesday we went to Lexington to see where the first shots of the American Revolution were fired.  Both the Patriot and British commanders told their troops not to fire; someone did but no one knows which side it was on.


Buckman Tavern.  They have tours but they're closed on Tuesdays!  It sits across the street from Lexington Battle Green, where the fighting started.

The Patriot militia had been warned that the British were coming.  On April 19, 1775, seventy seven men gathered on Lexington Green to wait for them.  At 5am the first shot was fired and eight colonists died.

Lexington Green plaque.

Captain John Parker statue, commander of the local militia.

Lexington Green

A memorial built in 1779 to the first men who died on April 19, 1775.

"The remains of the those who fell in the Battle of Lexington were brought here from the Old Cemetery, April 20, 1835, and buried within the railing in the front of this monument."

We then drove to Concord to the Minute Man National Historical Park Minute Man Visitor Center.  They have a nice display explaining the timeline of April 19, 1775.  They also have an excellent multi-media presentation.  It's probably the best national park 'film' we've ever seen.

After Lexington the British went to Concord searching for weapons and gunpowder that the colonists had stored up.  Word had been spread to the local militias of the battle at Lexington, and an increasing number of militia joined together and fired on the British the whole way to Concord.  They didn't line up like traditional warfare was done back then; they knew the woods and land and fired behind trees and rocks, and hills.  At 9am the British found some weapons and burned them. The militia, up on a hill, thinking that homes were burning go down to the North Bridge in Concord to fight.  The British retreat and head back for Boston via Lexington where reinforcements fire cannon at the colonists.  They start marching back to Boston, but the militia are fighting the whole way back in increasing numbers.  That evening the British are back in Charlestown.  They counted 73 dead and 174 wounded; Colonials have 49 men dead and 41 wounded.  The war has begun

We drove on the road past many old 'witness' homes and taverns that were there during the battle from Lexington to Concord and went to the North Bridge and North Bridge Visitor Center.

The Minute Man Statue



On the North Bridge looking toward where the British were.

On the North Bridge looking toward where the Colonists were.

British Memorial

Inscription on British Memorial

We drove back to the campground and here we'll stay until we leave on Friday as we decided not to go back in to see the USS Constitution.  Then we'll be...

Roving on...

For this is what the LORD says, He who created the heavens (He is the God who formed the earth and made it, He established it and not create if as a waste place, but formed it to be inhabited): "I am the LORD, and there is no one else."  Isaiah 45:1


Princess Cruise

 February 22 - March 5, 2026 We went on this cruise with our friends and neighbors, Vince and Kayleen.  It was not something we would have d...