Soak in the colors

You just can’t rush through western Maine

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Table Rock trail in western Maine includes part of the Appalachian Trail. (MCT News Service)
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A hurried fall-colors trip would have meant five minutes up there before descending into my next adventure, but there was no way; yellow-orange hills and peaks stretched to infinity, and they had to be savored.

Midsavor, Tommy and Barbara O’Brien arrived in matching hiking boots and L.L. Bean backpacks. They’re from Natchez, Miss., and visit Maine most summers. This was the first time they had come in the fall, they said, which led to a startling revelation.

“We’ve never seen fall foliage before,” said Tommy, 61.

They live in the South, so it made some sense. But still: a lifetime without fall color? And here we were, looking down on a sea of it.

“I hate to say it, but we’ve missed out,” Tommy said.

“It’s like God took his paint buckets and spilled all his colors here,” said Barbara, 57.

By the time I worked my way back down the mountain, it was close to dinner time. I took a leisurely drive back to my hotel in Bethel, and that was it. My ambitions for the day were thwarted by beauty.

Western Maine’s most popular tourist seasons are winter (for skiing) and summer (when New England is gentle and warm), which leaves autumn not exactly a secret but criminally underrated, as illustrated by the fact that on my six-hour hike, I saw almost as many llamas (two) as people (five).

Fall’s rewards can be found throughout the region, a tangle of small highways that are worth driving aimlessly. Those roads boast roadside signs such as “PUMPKINS + SQUASH,” “Pony Rides” and “Farm Stand Ahead.” In those farm stands, they sell eggs, honey, tomatoes, apples, pumpkins and Maine maple syrup. Many of the roads are narrow and winding, tree-shaded and split by double-yellow lines. In some cases, they’re barely wide enough for two cars.

The leaves above and beyond put color literally around every bend – orange, red, yellow, purple and the colors in between, lush and vibrant like sherbet, especially when illuminated by the morning sun. It’s clear who was there for the same reasons as me: They drove slowly, bearing license plates from Texas, Florida and Georgia.

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