Maine Trail Guides
12 trails across Maine — from easy walks to serious summits.
100 Mile Wilderness
The most remote stretch of the AT — 99 miles of boreal wilderness from Monson to Katahdin with no road crossings, no resupply, and no way out but forward.
Acadia National Park
The best introduction to Acadia hiking: coastal cliffs, pink granite, and a 500-foot summit with panoramic Atlantic views — a half-day loop from Sand Beach.
A short hike in western Acadia to a historic fire tower with views of Echo Lake, Long Pond, and the open Atlantic — one of the best family hikes in the park.
Western Mountains
Maine's finest alpine ridge — two 4,000-foot AT summits, overnight camping at Horns Pond, and sweeping views of Flagstaff Lake and Sugarloaf.
Hike to the summit of Cadillac Mountain, the highest point on the eastern seaboard, with sweeping views of Frenchman Bay and the Porcupine Islands.
A remote gorge hike through Maine's most dramatic slot canyon — waterfalls, slate walls, swimming holes, and wilderness solitude in the 100 Mile Wilderness.
A flat, family-friendly loop around Jordan Pond with postcard views of the Bubbles reflected in still water — one of the most iconic easy hikes in Acadia.
Baxter State Park
The crown jewel of Maine hiking — a demanding full-day adventure to the northern terminus of the Appalachian Trail and Maine's highest peak.
Moosehead Lake
A ferry-access-only hike to a historic fire tower above Moosehead Lake, with dramatic rhyolite cliffs and 360-degree views of Maine's largest lake.
Midcoast Maine
Camden Hills classic ridge loop — summit Maine's highest coastal peak with views across Penobscot Bay to Islesboro and beyond.
Grafton Notch State Park
Maine's third-highest peak via the AT through Grafton Notch — a sustained 3,000-foot climb rewarded with a fire tower and sweeping views of the Mahoosucs.
A thrilling scramble with iron rungs and ladders up a sheer cliff face, rewarded with sweeping views over Sand Beach and the Champlain Mountain ridge.
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