The Marsh in Early October
Saturday, October 5th, 2013 11:02 amAs some of you may know, I had been looking forward to a walk in the early autumn marsh, and had picked as my destination the Rachel Carson Wildlife Refuge mile-loop trail in Wells. A dart thrown at the calendar pegged Wednesday October 2 dead-center, a day on which the weatherbeans were calling for sunny and warm. The stars thus aligning and the gods smiling, I continued with my plans, changed the batteries in my camera, packed a go-bag, asked Steve if he would care to accompany me, made plans for exploring Wells after my walk in the marsh. . .
. . .which was about the time that I recalled that the Full And Proper Name of the marsh in question is:
The Rachel Carson NATIONAL Wildlife Refuge.
A quick check of the net confirmed my suspicion. Yep, the refuge had been closed as part of the Federal Government Shutdown.
Well, phuck.
I'd really been looking forward to my little hike-and-photo-shoot, and at dinner was making a effort to reconcile myself to its loss. Steve suggested a walk in the other marsh, at Pine Point, but I was. . .somewhat leery, since I hadn't been able to find any information about it other than it seemed to be under the control of the Audubon Society, so perhaps might be open. Steve suggested that we go down and check it out for ourselves.
Which is what we did.
It turns out that the trail off of Route 9 in Pine Point is part of the Eastern Trail Alliance, which connects Kittery to South Portland -- 65 miles of trail in Maine. The Eastern Trail Alliance, in turn, is part of the East Coast Greenway, which eventually aims to connect Calais, Maine, to Key West, Florida.
Who knew?
So, the section that we walked connects Pine Point to Black Point -- a distance of about 2.5 miles. Since we didn't know then the distance to Black Point, we only walked about a mile of the trail. We had plenty of company; it was, as the weatherbeans had predicted, a Perfectly Gorgeous Day -- people walking, running, biking; and also standing in one place, taking photographs.
I took some photographs, too; they're reproduced below, for your viewing pleasure.








