
I flew into Portland during a storm and drove straight to the coast. No hotel lobby check-in, no settling in first. Maine was right there and I wasn’t going to sit in a room when the Atlantic was 45 miles away. That first instinct set the tone for the whole trip.
Here’s how the four days went.
Day 1 — The coast first, then the mountain
Maine introduces itself the second you step outside Portland airport. Salty, oceany, a fragrance that hits you before you’ve even found the car. I hadn’t even made it to the rental yet and something had already shifted. I drove south to York first — 45 miles down the coast — and I’d tell anyone to do the same. Most people skip it and head straight to Acadia. That is a mistake.
Sohier Park, Nubble Lighthouse, the bluest water I have ever seen in my life. I ended up next to a man fishing at the rocks on Labor Day who taught me to put a worm on a hook. Poor worm. That conversation lasted twenty minutes and I learned more about Maine from him than from anything I’d read before the trip. York doesn’t feel like a tourist town. That’s exactly the point.
By evening I was on top of a mountain in West Paris watching the sunset go from burning yellow to deep blue. Then darker. Then somehow brighter. A million stars above my head and slowly, the Milky Way became visible to the naked eye — a blueish galaxy stretching across the sky like it had been waiting for me to look up. I grabbed a blanket, made myself a cozy nook on the porch, and just stayed there. Maine outside light pollution zones does something to you. I have always had a thing for stars and that night reminded me exactly why.


What to See
- Sohier Park — free, right across from Nubble Lighthouse, walk to the rocks at the water’s edge not the paved path
- Nubble Lighthouse — built in 1879, one of the most photographed lighthouses in New England, best viewed from the rocks
- York Beach Charters — intimate lighthouse cruises up to 6 passengers, worth booking for the view from the water
- Portland Head Light — Maine’s most iconic lighthouse, 20 minutes from the airport. Save it for Day 4 or stop here if your flight gets in early.
What to Eat
- Fox’s Lobster House — right near Sohier Park, ocean views of the lighthouse, lobster rolls and chowder. First Maine meal, done right.
What to Do
- Talk to whoever is fishing at the rocks. Seriously.
- Download a sky app before the trip — the Milky Way is visible to the naked eye outside light pollution zones and West Paris is exactly that. Grab a blanket and stay up.
- Ogunquit Beach is 20 minutes north of York if you want a stretch of sand before heading north — one of the most beautiful beaches on the New England coast
Read before you go
- First time in York? The full York and Nubble Lighthouse guide is here
Day 2 — Acadia, Bar Harbor, and the night that wasn’t planned
I didn’t go straight to the trail. I drove Park Loop Road first with the windows down — dense forest canopy filtering light into something soft and green, then opening suddenly into views that make no sense until you see them. I could have done slow loops just for the road. That beautiful.
Jordan Pond stopped me completely. The trail loops 3.2 miles around the pond with the Bubble Mountains framing the view at one end — perfectly rounded, sitting side by side, the kind of shape that makes you do a double take. About 15 minutes in I walked out onto the rocks at the water’s edge and just sat there. Eyes closed. Breeze coming off the water, birds in the trees, the sound of the pond moving gently against the rocks, kids playing somewhere in the distance. I wasn’t planning to stay that long. I stayed an hour.
Bar Harbor in the evening and honestly I wasn’t prepared for it. One end of Main Street opens into ocean views. The other dissolves into the mountains of Acadia. The town couldn’t decide what kind of beautiful it wanted to be so it just picked both. I wandered, I ate oysters pulled straight from Frenchman Bay, I had the best wheat beer of my life, and I ended the evening at Agamont Park with a chocolate waffle cone watching the sailboats go still as the light changed. And then I bumped into friends from my master’s days in New York, completely by chance, in a small town in Maine. The odds. What followed was a full night — bonfire, big speakers, the kind of conversation that only happens when you haven’t seen people in a while. Everybody was out by 5am. I made it through to sunrise.


What to See
- Park Loop Road — 27 miles (43 km), drive it slowly before anything else, windows down
- Jordan Pond — 3.2 mile (5.1 km) easy loop, Bubble Mountains framing the view, walk out onto the rocks
- Cadillac Mountain — highest point on the eastern seaboard, summit opens in every direction, two blues of ocean and sky never merging
- Agamont Park, Bar Harbor — open bay, sailboats, one island in the distance. Start here before the shops pull you in.
- Shore Path — two thirds of a mile along the rocky coastline, free, best uninterrupted bay views on foot
- Thunder Hole — waves crash into a narrow rock chasm and boom. Go at mid-tide.
- Sand Beach — only sandy beach in Acadia, cold water, stunning surrounded by granite cliffs
What to Eat
- Jordan Pond House — afternoon tea on the lawn, direct views of the pond and the Bubbles, popovers that people plan trips around. If you haven’t eaten after the trail, do not walk past this.
- The Barnacle — waterfront patio, about 30 minutes wait on a weekend evening, Cadillac Oysters pulled straight from Frenchman Bay. Get them raw.
- Bar Harbor Beer Works — 40-plus beers on draft, outdoor seating, casual and good. Early evening stop before oysters.
- Maine Beer Company on tap across Bar Harbor — ask for the Black Barn Program series. Ask the bartender. Everyone has an opinion. The beer earns it.
- Mount Desert Island Ice Cream — everything from scratch, flavors rotate and get creative. Chocolate, waffle cone, non-negotiable. Take it to Agamont Park.
What to Do
- Wander Main Street slowly — Island Artisans for Maine-made craft, FIORE for olive oil tastings, The Acadia Shop for souvenirs that aren’t magnets
- Watch the sailboats at Agamont Park as the light changes with your ice cream. That’s the Bar Harbor moment.
- Island Explorer shuttle connects Bar Harbor and Acadia for free — useful if you want to skip parking entirely
- America the Beautiful pass or timed entry reservation required for Acadia — check the park website before you go, the system updates seasonally
Read before you go
- First time in Acadia? Full Acadia guide here
- First time in Bar Harbor? Full Bar Harbor guide here
Day 3 — The slow day
I always add an extra day to every trip. Not for activities. Just for being.
The morning after a very loud night, I made myself some honey chamomile tea, stood on that porch, and just breathed. Body exhausted, mind somehow wide awake and calm. That’s what alone time in nature does to me. What followed was the simplest day of the entire trip — hot tub, pool, porch, music, journaling, more seafood. I didn’t go anywhere. The mountain did all the talking.
A trip is a sneak peek of what life could look and feel like somewhere else and the slow day is where that actually lands. You go home with more, not less.


If you can’t fully unplug
- Schooner cruise out of Bar Harbor — two hours sailing Frenchman Bay, one of the most peaceful things you can do in Maine
- Sea kayaking around the Porcupine Islands — guided tours from Bar Harbor, calm water, low effort high reward
- Drive the quieter western side of Mount Desert Island — Bass Harbor, Southwest Harbor, Seawall Picnic Area. Fewer crowds, same beauty, completely different pace.
Day 4 — Fort Williams and the food truck that almost wasn’t
Maine saved the best food moment for last and made me work for it a little.
I had researched Cousins food truck before the trip, starved myself all morning in preparation, drove to Fort Williams Park in Cape Elizabeth — and the truck wasn’t there. I was so disappointed. Genuinely hangry. I walked to Portland Head Light anyway, clutching my jacket against the wind, waves crashing hard on the rocks below. Even in the grey and the cold and the rain the view was still immaculate. Some views just refuse to be ruined by weather. I walked back to the car.
The truck was being set up. Right there.
I waited however long it took. When the rolls were ready I had three. Because I had earned three. Before Maine I wasn’t really into seafood — an occasional fish, nothing more. The lobster was so fresh it blew my mind. Light, fluffy, that beautiful red on top I genuinely did not expect. Standing in the rain eating roll after roll, smiling like an idiot. It was still raining. I did not care. That was Maine’s last surprise. And honestly, one of the best.


What to See
- Portland Head Light — Maine’s most iconic lighthouse, stunning even in bad weather, right inside Fort Williams Park
- Fort Williams Park — free, oceanside, worth a walk even beyond the lighthouse
What to Eat
- Cousins food truck — lobster rolls, Fort Williams Park entrance. Research hours before you go. If it’s not there when you arrive, wait.
What to Do
- Give yourself at least an hour here before heading to the airport
- Portland International Jetport is 15 minutes away — small, easy, stress-free exit
Before you go
- You need a car — Maine is not walkable and the drive is half the experience
- Fly into Portland International Jetport — small, easy, right where you need to be
- September is the sweet spot — crowds thin, weather stays warm, light gets softer and golden earlier. October brings fall colors and the Cadillac sunrise window opens up.
- Book accommodation early — the good places fill up fast
Planning your own Maine trip? Drop your questions in the comments — the trails, the food trucks, the Airbnb, the drives, all of it. I’ll answer every single one.
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The full Maine story — including the food truck I almost missed — is all right here.





