We brought our knowledge of fermenting and distilling back home to Maine, and we've been committed ever since to crafting wines and spirits from real Maine ingredients. Maine's unique growing seasons have become our inspiration, and we delight in finding new distillations to make from the bounty of Maine fruits and grains. (Curated content from sweetgrasswinery.com)
A 200-year-old family farm with an unsurpassed combination of award-winning, solar powered, Maine grown wines, beautiful atmosphere and open-air concerts with nationally known musicians. Enjoy wine tastings at our bar or wine flights on the deck. (Curated content from www.savageoakes.com)
The Fat Friar’s Meadery is a Maine farm winery that specializes in the creation of Mead. We are located in Newcastle, Maine just off of Route 215 approximately 1 mile from the head of Damariscotta Lake. Because our Mead is made with the finest ingredients, and is never rushed, the quality and taste are of the highest standards. (Curated content from www.thefatfriarsmeadery.com)
Experience Living History and Local Culture aboard our Railway Excursions in the Heart of Midcoast Maine (Curated content from wwfry.org)
Located on the northwest shore of beautiful Lake St. George just 16 miles west of Belfast and 25 miles east of Augusta on Maine Route 3 in Liberty, the park offers year-round activities and camping. Winter camping is also offered and available by reservation by calling the park. Visitors can rent canoes, paddle boats, or kayaks to explore the park's undeveloped shoreline. (Curated content from www.maine.gov)
The Snow Bowl has that friendly small-town feel. With nearly 1,000 feet of vertical elevation and more than 20 recently expanded runs, it shines as a seacoast ski resort. Nestled among picturesque harbors, charming inns and award-winning restaurants, the Snow Bowl is also the only ski area on the East Coast with ocean views. (Curated content from camdensnowbowl.com)
Viles Arboretum is an independent 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that was established in 1982 in conjunction with the Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands in order to provide educational, recreational, and inspirational opportunities through the conservation of land and the cultivation of trees and other woody plants from around the world. (Curated content from vilesarboretum.org)
We invite you to explore for yourself the people and purpose behind the American Revolution. Our doors and grounds are open for you to touch, feel, smell, and even taste life as it was 242 years ago and imagine, in new ways, what it was like to participate in creating monumental, historic change. (Curated content from knoxmuseum.org)
Representatives of Plymouth Colony were the first English to actually live here. In 1625, on a river expedition to find a place to trade agricultural products for Indian furs, Plymouth pilgrims chose the east shore for their "House at Kennebeck". The post, probably built in 1628, was operated by the original traders and, later, by Plymouth Company with varying degrees of success, until it was abandoned some time between 1669 and 1676. (Curated content from www.augustamaine.gov)