![]() ![]() A 74 acre wooded peninsula with over a mile of shoreline on the Damariscotta river. Red spruce, northern red oak, and balsam fir border an old field. Self-guiding nature trails and interpretive signs in western portion known as Dyer Neck, which contains numerous bog species. Extensive freshwater wetlands draining three ponds. As a bog, it has its share of bugs, including deer ticks but it also features turtles, and many birds. It includes the bog, hiking trails, and small bridges. The 54 acre property is owned by the Damariscotta River Association. The dense forest gives way to swamp, freshwater marsh and overgrown farmland in places, providing interesting contrasts. Hardwoods and conifers surround 3,600 feet of shore frontage on Muscongus Bay on the Pemaquid Peninsula. Now the Department of Marine Resources may not license shellfish harvesting in the bay. In earlier times, it had been a very productive environment, used by Native Americans as the huge shell middens nearby indicate. Formerly polluted by industrial activity, it has been closed to shellfish harvesting for many years. Protected by Maine legislation, it is the state’s first marine shellfish protected area. Great Salt Bay, Damariscotta, Newcastle, Nobleboro. It includes large sections of the Dresden Bog, which offers a canoe trip over two small beaver dams, through a narrow channel to the open water of a large pond. This 500 acre area, 290 acres of which is marshland. Kelley Wildlife Management Area, Dresden. Visitors arrive by boat from the public landing in Damariscotta or by vehicle using the River Road in Newcastle.Įrle R. An interpretive trail starts at the Old Farm Road and the Shore Trail has fine views. Outdoor recreational opportunities include hiking, cross-country skiing, skating, swimming and fishing. The property has over 8,000 feet of frontage on the Damariscotta River with pocket sand and pebble beaches, vistas from the River’s shore, freshwater ponds and stream-cut ravines in the interior uplands. Accessible by a Nature Conservancy dock.ĭodge Point Public Reserved Land, located on the western shore of the Damariscotta River, encompasses 521 acres in the Town of Newcastle. Home to large populations of nesting seabirds and muskrats. This National Historic Landmark (Maine’s earliest permanent settlement) is 209 acres of treeless, coastal tundra vegetation. Park on Back Shore Road.ĭamariscove Island, Boothbay. Great Salt Bay from the Mills Road in Newcastle (2004) Preserves owned and managed by Coastal Rivers Conservation Trustīass Rock Preserve, Round Pond. Nichols.Articles about Maine history, government, ecology, economy, recreation, towns, natural features, famous people, sports, with maps, photos, and videos. Emerson author & jogging enthusiast Jim Fixx congressman Thomas J. Some notable people from Hardwick include: writer Catherine Cate Coblentz lawyer & author Dorman Bridgman Eaton Governor of Vermont Lee E. ![]() ![]() ![]() Buildings around the country made with Hardwick granite include the Pennsylvania State Capitol, Chicago City Hall, Old Post Office Building in Washington, D.C., as well as numerous city halls and custom houses. The predominant business following the Civil War was granite quarrying and Hardwick became known as the "Building Granite Center of the World." By 1906, 1200 people were employed in the industry. Hardwick is a commercial center for the region's farming population. The town contains the incorporated village of Hardwick and the unincorporated villages of East Hardwick and Mackville. Hardwick Vermont is a town in Caledonia County, east of Morrisville and west of St Johnsbury, in the beautiful and scenic Northeast Kingdom of Vermont, an area that National Geographic selected as part of their geotourism program for sustainable destinations. ![]()
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