2 Best Sights in Boothbay Harbor, The Mid-Coast Region

Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens

Fodor's choice

Reserve your admission tickets in advance online (required), and set aside a couple of hours to explore New England's largest botanical garden, where, depending on the time of year, you can stroll amid the lupines, rhododendrons, or roses. Regardless of the season, you'll encounter the site's biggest (literally and figuratively) draws: the five gigantic and utterly irresistible trolls constructed by Danish artist Thomas Danbo using scrap wood and other found materials that are placed in wooded areas throughout the 323-acre grounds.

The children's garden is a wonderland of stone sculptures, rope bridges, small teahouse-like structures with grass roofs, and even a hedge maze. Children and adults alike adore the separate woodland fairy area. The Garden of the Five Senses lets you experience flora through much more than just sight. Inside the main building are a café, grab-and-go market, shop, and resource library. During the holiday season, the gardens mount a dazzling, nighttime Gardens Aglow show, with 650,000 LED bulbs lighting up the darkness.

Comfortable walking shoes are a must, but, if you'd prefer not to walk everywhere, there's free shuttle service to several key locales. In addition, free, hour-long, docent-led tours of the central gardens leave from the visitor center at 11 each day from May through October. There's also a one-hour golf cart tour ($10; free on Wednesday).

132 Botanical Gardens Dr., Boothbay, Maine, 04537, USA
207-633–8000
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $22, Closed late Oct.–May 1, except for holiday season Gardens Aglow extravaganza, Reservations required

Boothbay Railway Village

Beside Route 27, about a mile outside Boothbay Harbor, this charming recreation of a New England village has more than two dozen small, historic, and reconstructed Maine structures, including a general store, train station, blacksmith shop, firehouse, hardware store, toy shop, and covered bridge. More than 60 automobiles are also on display. Take a ride on the passenger train—pulled by a century-old, coal-fired steam locomotive—that loops through the 30-acre site on a narrow-gauge track. Activities might also include Model T rides, demonstrations by blacksmiths and other artisans, and special events on the village green.