It didn't.
Anyway. So now we are deep into America, having persuaded the border police that nothing they had read about us was true. It was a pleasant enough crossing - if a little complicated and requiring a lot of paperwork and questions. We crossed into Calais, which is a border we are familiar with in France, where it is pronounced Calay, but in Maine it is Callas.
On the Canadian side of the river the town is St Stephen and it feels like a border town somehow. I wonder what it would feel like if you didn't know it was a border town? But you do, with direction signs on the main street saying "USA, left turn" and shops advertising that they take both kinds of dollars. There was a busyness to the place that wasn't justified by anything other than its location.
Before we crossed the border we used up our remaining Canadian cash at a Tim Horton's, which we have passed a million times since entering Canada and never stopped at because of a misplaced snobbery that they were some kind of Canadian McDonalds, Oh no. Nancy in Halifax put us right on that one. They also serve great coffee in a range of civilised sizes so you don't have to get a bucketful of the stuff AND they sell terrific pastries and donuts and again you can get little mouthful-sized things if you want for less than a dollar. Why on earth didn't we come here before?
| At this point, the front of the GMC was in the US while the back was in Canada |
They call this bit of Maine "Down East". Its not very touristy and not particularly prosperous. We passed endless grocery stores up for sale or falling down; a "Dairy Dreams" snack bar with its roof falling in, next to a house looking blindly through boarded up windows. Occasionally we saw people by the road selling things from trestle tables - clothes mostly. The road varied between newly-laid fresh black asphalt and ancient rotting tarmac creased by the sun and the cold and crumbling away at the edges. I drove right down the middle for as much as I could.
In East Machias we saw a restaurant with tables outside covered in dazzling white tablecloths. Lots of cars were parked by the road and we joined them but found that the restaurant was closed and there was a wedding going on. From the road we looked down a grassy bank to a simple wooden arbor made of birch poles where we could hear the bride and groom saying their vows. It was a lovely little scene.
"But what did you do about lunch"? I hear you ask. Well thanks for your concern. We had lunch at Helen's Restaurant in Machias three miles further on, and it was excellent, since you asked. Philippa had a succulent lobster roll and I had a Haddock sandwich ("our best selling item!") composed of freshest, whitest, moistest, and best cooked piece of fish I think I have had on this whole trip.
Across the road was a travelling funfair manned by bored hispanics with no English. But Tom learned how to work a dodgem car and during those five minutes went from cross-faced "this was a waste of money I can't make it work" to bouncing with excitement "thiswasbrilliantmyabsolutefavourite". He also went on the whirling saucers twice and wanted to keep going. Philippa and I felt dizzy watching.
And back on Highway 1, winding through canyons of trees almost up the road's edge until we reached Acadia. Its a big park and not quite as either of us had imagined. We were expecting untrammelled wilderness but its actually collection of very pretty villages, surrounded by craggy shoreline and modest mountains carefully arranged to look gorgeous.
We shall explore tomorrow and Tom has promised to wait until 8 before going to find Sophia who is camping a couple of sites down and is six, going on, ooh at least eight. She marched over to us all blond hair and confidence as we were sitting outside and swept Tom away. They played together until it was dark and I think he is a bit smitten.
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