It was closed when we arrived, so we couldn’t take a ride. The museum has over three-quarters of a mile of two foot gauge track. Having three steam locomotives available for service along with vintage and replications of Maine…
It is a small lovely harbour village. In front of one of the restaurants is the 15 feet tall grizzled sea salt. Nothing spectacular but lots of small restaurants, bridges and small houses. Walk around, take a break and the best time is around sunset.
The World’s Largest Rotating Globe is still spinning in the lobby of a Maine-based mapping company. DeLorme (now evolved into a software company), put itself on the destination grid in 1998 with Eartha, a 41-ft. diameter globe.
The Jelly Beans World is in the entrance hall of a furniture store. The walls are decoreated with huge flowers made of Jelly Beans. You can buy your favourite Jelly flavors or get huge ice cream cones.
Mystic Seaport is an educational outdoor museum for the whole family. You can learn and live real-life American history. The preservation shipyard features the last existing wooden whaling vessel, the Charles W.
One of my former famous movies was “Salem’s Lot – Brennen muss Salem” and that was the reason to travel to Salem and dip down into the world of witches. The tour started with a great played witch trial, where the audience gets involved.
The artist Stephen Huneck had built a chapel where any creature could feel welcome. He created the Dog Chapel. Their are Dog-Fences, Doggy-Sculptures and yes we signed the Golden Dog Book.or so, and is a work of art rather than a place of worship.
The master of horror lives here – Stephen King. Huge spider web front gate topped by bats. The most spooky thing is the huge Baseballfield behind the house. We were watching a game and talked about Clowns and IT.
Lots of trash art on the outside. Inside it is an antique stove shop. Antqie stove were too heavy for us, so we just took some pictures of the Tin Man. The read heart had something from E.T.
A fifty foot tall metal cone of the TePee was built in 1950 along New York State’s US Route 20. The TePee offers “The Grand Panoramic View” of Cherry Valley, and a shop to buy Indian souvenirs.

















