Features
At the Endless Summer Flower Farm in Camden, a couple has made a specialty of nurturing 230 varieties of late-season showstoppers.
- By: Rebecca Martin Evarts
- Photography by: Greg Currier
The leadership at virtually all of Maine’s major art institutions has changed in the past few years. Do these new faces signal a shift in the direction of Maine art?
Change has already come to the Maine North Woods. According to acclaimed environmental author and activist Robert Kimber, it’s about to come a whole lot faster.
- Photography by: Douglas Merriam
When we, the editors of Down East, tried to winnow scores of stunning Maine harbors down to just ten, we knew we had to call in the experts — you. Thousands voted on DownEast.com. Here are your picks, in your words.
Small-town police work is 99 percent tedium and 1 percent terror. Good cops love it all.
Complete with a writing tower overlooking Somes Sound, this house is where Roxana Robinson, acclaimed author of Cost and a half dozen other literary works, perfects her craft.
- Photography by: Benjamin Magro
Joseph McCarthy, of Kennebunk, is an author and naturalist who has spent years documenting Maine animals that do not actually exist — but should.
- Illustrations by: Dean MacAdam
Departments
Who's to blame for the FairPoint telephone and broadband fiasco? More parties than you might think.
Read what our readers have to say about Maine.
- Photography by: Dean Abramson
One family from Bath and their boats.
When David Quinn, the founder of Acorn (2 Cedar St., 800-872-2676, www.acorn.com), a footwear company based in Lewiston, landed a deal with NASA in 1982, the company gave new meaning to its slogan “Comfort on Earth.” That year, astronauts were sent on their shuttle missions wearing Acorn’s signature Slipper Socks. Since then, astronauts have logged more than five hundred million miles in their comfy Acorns, and one pair has been placed on permanent exhibit at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.
- Photography by: Acorn Products
In Lakeville, the walk to town is better than the drive.
Trashcan mail, Mainers and their teeth (or lack thereof), some Vinalhaven fossils, and other random musings from Maine.
Navigating Maine in a new age.
Editorial opinions from across the state.
There’s nothing much better than a sticky bun in the morning — or really any time of day. And you’ll have a hard time finding a sweeter one than the pastry served at Home Kitchen Café (650 Main St., 207-596-2449) in Rockland. The breakfast and lunch joint features delectable buns, with or without nuts, that are buttery blocks of sugar and spice. At nearly four bucks a piece (and worth every penny), these buns make a great appetizer to split, or a veritable meal for one.
- Photography by: Jennifer Baum
Lily’s Café and Wine Bar offers gourmet food and friendly faces on Deer Isle.
- Photography by: Jennifer Smith-Mayo
Have you ever seen this flying moose?
- Photography by: Jennifer Baum
The hopes of Goose Rocks floated with this “houseboat” in 1951.
- Photography by: Yale Joel/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images