You Haven't Lived Until You've Experienced This One Incredible Park In Maine
By Michelle|Published November 30, 2017
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Michelle
Author
Michelle's life is a colorful map of exploration and adventure. From the iconic streets of New York to the sunny shores of Florida, the jagged coast of Maine to the rugged terrain of Montana, she's been fortunate to call some of America's most beautiful states home. Beyond the U.S., Michelle's wanderlust has taken her on a motorcycle journey through India, led her to teach English in Hanoi, and saw her studying Spanish in Guatemala. Michelle graduated with a communications degree from the S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University and in addition to a career in advertising has worked with OnlyInYourState since 2016, where her love for travel and storytelling converges. Alongside writing and exploring, Michelle finds joy in photography, staying active, and time with her family.
For questions, comments and inquiries please email: mstarin@onlyinyourstate.com.
Maine is full of parks. Parks, beaches, trails, woods… you name it, we’ve got it! Every few months we start looking for new options. We’ve all been to Acadia, Baxter and the woods where we live, but what’s out there that’s unexplored? We just came across this beautiful, easy trail that’s actually right in the backyards for a lot of people! It probably won’t take a long drive on gravel back roads for you to get there and when you do, you’ll wonder how you missed it all these years. Thanks to Maine Trail Finder (as always) for leading us here.
The Saco Heath Preserve offers an excellent opportunity to see an ecology unique to the area.
It forms when ponds fill with peat, which is decayed plants. Each year, more of these decaying plants add to the peat in the ponds until the pond areas (now called "peatlands") grow together, rising above the water table.
This might sound like an icky situation, but it actually allows for incredible plantlife, such as Labrador tea, leather-leaf, Rhodora, cottongrass, and Atlantic white cedar, all of which can thrive despite the lack of nutrients found here.
Getting to Saco Heath Preserve is easy. Make your way to ME Route 112, which is also called Buxton Road. Continue for approximately two miles. You’ll see the parking lot for the Preserve on the right.