Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Life at the End of the Road


Now that I am back at home, I can prattle on and tell a proper tale.  The spotty wifi signal made blogging in Fort Kent really annoying.  I lost part of my "S is for Snow and Sled" post and had to retype the last couple of paragraphs before publishing.  It was amazing I got the "Breaking Bread" post done.

But enough whining, I love Northern Door Inn and Fort Kent in general.  I have a topic to discuss.

Fort Kent marks the northern tip of US Route 1.  This sign is right outside the Northern Door Inn, where I stay.  The other side of the sign is the same but marks it as mile 0.  US Route 1 runs from Fort Kent to Key West, Florida.  It still is a major pre-interstate highway route.

In Maine, it runs along the St. John river on the northern border from Fort Kent to Van Buren.  Then it turns south and goes through Caribou and Presque Isle to Houlton.  It eventually leaves Aroostook County and enters Washington County in Danforth.  It keeps going south and connects the border town of Calais to the coast.  Machias is one of the coastal Washington County towns it connects to its more popular and more touristy cousins further down the Maine coast.  Then it runs near the coast to the New Hampshire border. 

But let us return to Fort Kent.


The America's First Mile Monument

This is right near the border crossing to Canada.  You can catch a glimpse of the bridge to Canada in the background.  You have to cross the St. John River to get to Clair, New Brunswick.  I plan to talk of these topics in future blogs, but I will mention now that the St. John River defines the northern border of Maine with Canada and that people on both sides of the border here are bilingual. 

English and French are spoken on both sides of the border.  The Quebecois think they have the corner market on the French language in Canada, but there is a rich French tradition in New Brunswick, too.

Although US Route 1 ends here, the road travels west into the towns of St. Francis and Allagash.  I had the pleasure last fall of wandering a little this way and to see the Allagash River.  It is gorgeous country out there.

Well enough of the end of the road for now.

Be Seeing You.

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