Rowing the Damariscotta
                  by Steven Roberts
                  Excerpted from GET 
                  OUTSIDE
                This years family vacation was to a cottage on 
                  the Damariscotta River in Maine. This trip report is a compilation 
                  of the rowing my daughter and I did in the "ET Bugaboo", 
                  during the week. 
                  
                  To start, the cottage was perfect... a truly Maine experience. 
                  It is owned by the Tonry family who use the dock as "home 
                  port" for their lobstering business. The cottage has been 
                  in Rich's family for at least a couple of generations. It is 
                  at the end of an isolated dirt road and provides a beautiful 
                  view of the river and the boats going by from the back deck.
                
                The wildlife in the area was a treat. Across the 
                  river were a couple of Osprey nests and every morning, the parents 
                  would be up in a tree, by the dock, scouting out fish to bring 
                  back to the fledglings (what a racket they would make). One 
                  morning I witnessed a swooping catch, and another I watched 
                  one eat a herring on the rocky shore. We also had Hummingbirds 
                  visiting the feeders off the deck, all day long, and Great Blue 
                  Herons would fish off the shore and in the pond in the backyard.
                
                My oldest daughter and I did a lot of exploring 
                  in our Skerry. The Tonry's were kind enough to provide a place 
                  to tie-up on the dock
                
                The Damariscotta is a great river to bring a small 
                  boat (I will definitely be coming back with my kayak). There 
                  are many coves to explore, and the wildlife is everywhere. Just 
                  about every time we went out, we would be followed by a seal, 
                  for a bit. As long as you pay attention to the tides, it is 
                  reasonably safe. There was very little boat traffic compared 
                  to waterways of South Shore, MA.
                
                The most memorable excursion for me was when we 
                  rowed down-river to a nature reserve called Dodge Point. My 
                  oldest and I packed up the boat with all of the beach gear and 
                  a picnic lunch, and met my wife and the baby at Pebble Beach 
                  on the point. 
                
                It was hardly a beach, but more a pocket of sand, 
                  but it was nice. It was only about 75 feet long, with large 
                  outcroppings of rock on either end, and low-hanging trees that 
                  hung out over the back of the beach, providing protection from 
                  the sun.
                
                After eating and relaxing under the shade of the 
                  branches, the oldest and I did a little exploring, made a sand 
                  castle (pebble castle), and built a fairy house. 
                
                We then went to the rocks and before I knew what 
                  had happened, my daughter had stepped off into water that was 
                  over her head. She panicked a bit, but swam back to the rock 
                  where I pulled her out. She cried for all of two minutes and 
                  then was jumping of the rock repeatedly for the next 20 minutes.
                
                Finally, it was time to head back. My daughter 
                  fell asleep in the aft seat while I rowed against a 10mph headwind. 
                  It was manageable, but a bit more work than the trip out. 
                
                That night, Rich took my oldest and I out to check 
                  lobster traps. What a great experience that was for her. I think 
                  it was the best part of the vacation for her... that and building 
                  fairy houses out on Monhegan Island.
                
                For more stories like this one, go to:
                  https://www.get-outside.com/ 
                  
                