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A saltwater marsh anyone on two wheels can navigate

June 26, 2011 | By Cathy Genthner, Globe Correspondent

SCARBOROUGH, Maine — I had not been on a bicycle in years and my weight had crept up along with my age. Those concerns evaporated with the early morning fog as soon as I got going.

It was easy pedaling on a 3-mile section of the Eastern Trail that cuts through the center of the Scarborough Marsh, a wildlife sanctuary just 15 minutes outside of Portland. My senses were awakened by the sight of a blue heron nestled among the marsh reeds, the piercing cries of seagulls overhead, and the smell of the stinging salt air as I watched an angler pull in a striper.

“We think it is a unique experience that one can encounter while on the most popular and visible section of the trail,’’ said Bob Hamblen, a vice president for the Eastern Trail Alliance. “You can come by on any given day and see birders, bird hunters during hunting season, fishermen, canoeists, runners, and bicyclists.’’

Seals have been seen swimming under the bridge that crosses the Dunstan River on the trail just off Pine Point Road. Eagles have been spotted.

“People come from all around the world to take in the habitat. There are countless birds and seals. It is a wildlife sanctuary and is protected by the State of Maine. It is dust free, smoke free, and fumes free,’’ said John Andrews, president of the alliance. “The marsh changes every hour as the sun goes across the clouds. It is just a beautiful place to go biking.’’

The trail through the marsh is one segment of the 65-mile trail that runs from Kittery to Portland, taking in eight lighthouses along the way. It is part of the 3,000-mile East Coast Greenway that stretches from Key West, Fla., to Calais. The trail crossing the marsh begins on Eastern Road (off Black Point Road) and heading south, goes for 3 miles to Pine Point Road and then to Old Blue Point Road. There are parking lots for vehicles and kiosks where the trail intersects the roads. The trail was constructed from the abandoned railroad that was built in 1841. Over a span of more than a century, the line was operated by the Portland, Saco and Portsmouth Railroad, followed by the Eastern Railroad, and lastly, the Boston and Maine Railroad until the end of World War II.

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GETTING THERE FROM HERE – Scarborough looks to close Eastern Trail gap

Posted: Wednesday, November 16, 2011 1:39 pm
By Duke Harrington dharrington@keepmecurrent.com

SCARBOROUGH – When John Andrews, 74, was a young boy growing up in Gardiner, he checked out every book on chess he could find at the Maine State Library in Augusta. That experience came in useful, he says, when it came time to piece together the easements needed to create the 69-mile-long Eastern Trail – a walking path designed to run from Kittery to Casco Bay.

“The principles of chess apply to building this trail,” said Andrews, while walking Saturday in a section behind Scarborough’s Hillcrest Retirement Community, where he now lives. “Easements are such wonderful fun, and getting them, like chess, is a kind of war, full of tactics and strategy. You don’t start right out and go after the king, you’ve first got to get this little piece, and then that little piece.”

Now, as president emeritus of the Eastern Trail Alliance, which he founded 14 years ago, Andrews is beginning to maneuver those pieces into checkmate. A $1.3 million bridge over Interstate 95 opened in August, and a 4.37-mile section of trail will link Saco and Old Orchard Beach “by Thanksgiving,” he says. That leaves just two small sections – in Biddeford and Scarborough – to finish

ohn Andrews, president emeritus of the Eastern Trail Alliance, sits where the Eastern Trail ends in Scarborough, at the old Eastern Railroad bridge over the Nonesuch River.

The trail’s end (for now)

John Andrews, president emeritus of the Eastern Trail Alliance, sits where the Eastern Trail ends in Scarborough, at the old Eastern Railroad bridge over the Nonesuch River. Plans are under way to build a way to cross the river and close a 0.8-mile gap in the trail between the river and the South Portland city line. (Staff photo by Duke Harrington)

the trail from Kennebunk to South Portland’s Bug Light Park. When complete, the Eastern Trail will mark a significant connection in the East Coast Greenway, a 3,000-mile-long trail linking Key West, Fla., to Calais, in Washington County.

The Scarborough gap, from the Nonesuch River to South Portland’s Wainwright Field complex, just over the town line, measures a mere 0.8 miles. But it could be one of the most difficult to build, given significant obstacles – in the form of rivers and railroads – that cross the path. Andrews says construction of that small slice could take up to three years and cost $3 million.

Last week, the Scarborough Town Council accepted a $150,000 grant that will get the ball rolling. Funneled from the feds through the Maine Department of Transportation, the money will pay for a study of how best to finish Scarborough’s section of the trail.

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People on the Trail: two inspiring stories

by Jim Munroe and Jim Bucar – Fall 2011 ETA Newsletter

The diversity of trail users — their backgrounds and purposes— defy easy listing or categories. In just recent months, we have encountered birders from the West coast of the U.S. searching for a rare egret sighted on the Marsh, a photographer from Soissons, France, executives from Michigan on a tandem bike, previewing the area before deciding to move here, a young father jogging while spending quality time with his infant daughter — but the Trail has also proven to be a unique resource for people with specific life goals. Here are just two examples.

barrylamarreBarry Lamarre

We encountered Barry on the Kennebunk section of the trail heading for the recently opened Turnpike Bridge. He

 

spontaneously shared his excitement about the trail and the role it had played with his personal transformation. It began 11 months ago, November 2010, when the KAB section of the trail had opened. He had been too much the couch potato, overweight, pre-diabetic, laboring with high blood pressure. Since then he has shed — by his most recent calculation — 100 pounds, reduced the need for blood pressure medication, and used a healthier diet and a regimen of exercise to control his blood sugar. One guess where he gets most of his exercise — the Eastern Trail and the roads it leads him to. He is certain that the allure of the outdoors helps keep him enthusiastic about staying fit. His only question: now that the Maine Turnpike is no longer a barrier, when do we start developing the trail south toward Portsmouth?

cassiecurley

Cassandra Curley

This July, Jim Munroe met Cassandra Curley, a 49 year-old ball of energy who has dedicated herself to a breathtaking endeavor: to promote Peace & Unity by walking 50 miles in each of the 50 states in 50 weeks. When she finishes, she will be 50 years old, with 2500 miles on her pedometer. She walks on greenways whenever possible. She began her trek in February, in part to promote her book, From Fear to Eternity, a Path to Peace, designed to help people achieve peace through love, a sense of purpose, and connection to one another. When she arrived in Maine, she found the Eastern Trail in Scarborough congenial to her purposes and goals, and shared her mission and excitement with Jim. You can follow her progress, and read about her desire to use part of her book profits to help children transition out foster care, on her web site: www.cassandracurley.com.

 

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Report urges development of ‘recreation corridors,’ including 3 in Maine

By Kevin Miller, Bangor Daily News Staff
Posted Dec. 27, 2011, at 6:24 p.m.

ETA Web Note: This article provides broader coverage of a recent report commissioned for the National Park Service that is urging support for seven interstate “recreation corridors” in New England — including three in Maine (and including the Eastern Trail corridor) — as a way to reconnect people with the outdoors and spur economic development in riverfront and trailside communities.

A recent report commissioned for the National Park Service is urging support for seven interstate “recreation corridors” in New England — including three in Maine — as a way to reconnect people with the outdoors and spur economic development in riverfront and trailside communities.

The report is not calling for the creation of new national parks or large-scale acquisition of private land for conservation. Instead, the authors are seeking to build public and private support for the completion or expansion of canoe trails, multiple-use trails and other multistate projects that would benefit residents and draw tourists.

The project grew out of a New England Governor’s Conference initiative on regional recreation opportunities. In April 2011, the National Park Service provided funding to compile the initiative’s work into a final report.

The seven recreational corridors or pathways that are the focus of the report are:

• Androscoggin River in Maine and New Hampshire.

• Northern Forest Canoe Trail in Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, New York and Quebec.

• Champlain Valley in Vermont and New York.

• Merrimack River in New Hampshire and Massachusetts.

• Connecticut River in Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont and New Hampshire.

• Blackstone River Valley in Rhode Island and Massachusetts.

• East Coast Greenway in Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut and New York.


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Archived News

Eastern Trail Gap Bridged

September 29, 2011

Eastern Trail gap bridged

The first-of-its-kind span over the Maine Turnpike completes a 6.2-mile stretch.

By Emma Bouthillette ebouthillette@mainetoday.com
Staff Writer

KENNEBUNK – As John Andrews watched nearly 500 elementary school students cross the Eastern Trail Bridge over the Maine Turnpike during its official opening on Wednesday, all he could do was smile.

The bridge, solely for pedestrians and cyclists, is the first of its kind spanning the turnpike. It completes a 6.2-mile section of trail from Kennebunk to Biddeford, and Andrews called it “the biggest challenge” in building the trail.

“I’ll tell you, I stand on that bridge and I really get choked up,” now that it’s finally complete, he said.

The $1.3 million bridge, funded by the Maine Turnpike Authority, is a key element in the alliance’s mission to complete a 65-mile stretch of off-road trail from Kittery to Casco Bay.

A bridge over Route 1 in Saco, expected to be installed by Nov. 1, will help complete nearly 21 consecutive miles of the trail in that area.

At the opening ceremony Wednesday at Kennebunk Elementary School, Maine Turnpike Authority Executive Director Peter Mills said the bridge is long overdue. He has heard for years about the need for a safe place for walkers and cyclists.

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Archived News

Critical link in the Eastern Trail set to open soon

WCSH6.com story – Tuesday, August 30th, 2011, 3:33pm
Submitted by Tim Goff

KENNEBUNK, Maine (NEWS CENTER) — A critical link in the Eastern Trail, a 60 mile long multi-use recreation trail stretching from South Portland to Kittery, is set to open soon.

“I think for the first time the Eastern Trail is really on the map,” stated Bob Hamblen, president of the Eastern Trail Alliance.  “We feel like we are opening the door a little bit and saying, world come on in.  We’ve got a trail, we’ve got a new bridge, we are building more trail as we speak, so come in and check us out.”

What has Hamblen so excited is construction on a $3 million bridge spanning the Maine Turnpike, connecting two sections of trail, will be complete in the next week to ten days.

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Blazing a Trail

August 7

Blazing a trail

Mile by mile, bridge by bridge, Eastern Trail supporters are closing in on their goal.

By Deirdre Fleming dfleming@mainetoday.com
Staff Writer

In 1997, all John Andrews wanted his Saco Bay Trails volunteers to build was a trail from Scarborough to Saco — a pathway through three towns.

A town officer told him he’d never get a bridge over Route 1, and support for the trail seemed minimal.

“Most of the people at that meeting are now dead,” Andrews said. “This December, it will be 14 years since we started.”

In December, Andrews and people from eight towns will celebrate the 21 miles of linear off-road bicycle and pedestrian trail they’ve built between South Portland and Kennebunk — and the opening of not only the Eastern Trail’s bridge over Route 1 but also another spanning the width of Interstate 95.

“All I had was the vision,” Andrews said. “The thing just exploded.”

In recent years, the vision of an off-road trail running the length of southern Maine has come closer to a reality as others have joined and worked alongside Andrews on the Eastern Trail.

This year, with an unprecedented number of off-road miles built on the unique path, those involved say there’s no stopping now.

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The Eastern Trail – Southern Maine’s Multi-Use Greenway (dev)

New Eastern Trail bridge over the Maine Turnpike, opened 2011The Eastern Trail is a 65 mile section of the East Coast Greenway, a transportation-recreation greenway connecting Kittery, in southernmost Maine to Casco Bay in South Portland!  

Eastern Trail route signThe Eastern Trail is both a trail and a vision. The Eastern Trail has a growing span of off-road sections, as well as a scenic on-road trail that mostly follows quiet country roads. Experienced bike riders and hikers can enjoy a beautiful journey from South Portland’s Bug Light Park on Casco Bay (near Portland) to Kittery’s Piscataqua River.

“The trail is humming with energy and events on its newly connected sections, but it’s not done growing.”  Maine Sunday Telegram, Dec. 2, 2012

We invite you to become an active part of our effort to build, enjoy, and sustain this wonderful resource.  This website will help you connect to current events, development activities, and other means of engaging with this trail and vision.

John Andrews and son in front of ET's John R. Andrews bridge in SacoIf you are new to us and to this site, the following links are a great place to start:

Also check out events that are happening on the trail, and then read the news both current and past. Also, please sign up for our mailing list so you can keep up with all the events and activities related to the trail.

The Eastern Trail is the Southern Maine section of the East Coast Greenway, a large network of trails that will connect Calais, Maine with Key West, Florida.

The Eastern Trail Alliance is the focused effort to vision, build, promote and use the trail.  It includes many supporters from all over (but particularly southern Maine), hikers, bikers, X-country skiers, birders, and other outdoor enthusiasts, dedicated to creating, enjoying and maintaining the Eastern Trail.


ET Map GuideEastern Trail Guide

This comprehensive 28-page spiral-bound booklet outlines each segment of our extensive on- and off-road trail network, providing detailed trail descriptions and maps in crisp vibrant color.

The Guide is available in several ways. One immediate way to get it is as a FREE download in a convenient, printable format (pdf).

A printed hard copy of the Trail Guide (8.5 inches by 5 inches) can be purchased from the Eastern Trail Alliance for $10 plus $3 shipping and handling. Click here to Order.

You may also buy the Trail Guide at a number of locations in southern Maine.  Click here for a list of current locations.

flickr photosharing logoClick here to view many photographs of the Eastern Trail

   

https://www.easterntrail.org/
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