Reviews of The Maine Coast Guide:Casco Bay


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If it's in Casco Bay, guide's got it covered
By Tux Turkel, staff writer
Portland Press Herald, Sunday, May 14, 2000, p. 10E


We are awaiting permisson to post this review.

 

Points East, August 2000
By Priscilla Wheatley


The Maine coast, with its 3,000 islands and 6,000 miles of shoreline, arguably offers the best cruising grounds on this side of the Atlantic, cold water notwithstanding. There are so many nooks and crannies to explore in anything from a kayak to a dinghy to a cruising yacht that it takes years to see them all.

Unfortunately, the choice of cruising guides is small, dictated no doubt by the relatively small market that Maine cruisers represent. Given our notorious fog, huge tides, unforgiving ledges and thick carpet of pot buoys, too many cruisers are scared away from exploring the great beauty of Maine's rocky coastline and its way of life.

Two recent additions to the small selection of cruising guides offer very different perspectives on experiencing the Maine coast from the water. One will get you from New Hampshire to Canada in short order. Unfortunately it ignores most of what is truly wonderful about cruising Maine. The other looks at Casco Bay in exquisite detail, and is a worthwhile companion for anyone planning to spend any time in the Bay.

Curtis Rindlaub's "Maine Coast Guide for Small Boats: Casco Bay" picks up where "A Cruising Guide to the Maine Coast" left off. Widely considered to be the bible of Maine cruising, the Cruising Guide's first two editions were the work of Hank and Jan Taft, who favored us with a truly comprehensive guide to the coast from the New Hampshire border to Eastport - virtually their life's work. Following Hank's untimely death, Rindlaub produced the third edition, updating it and adding hundreds of gunkholes, sketch maps, and a section on cruising New Brunswick.

"Casco Bay" is intended especially for smallboaters, such as kayakers, trailer-boaters, and casual

cruisers who don't intend to venture outside Casco Bay. Unlike its larger sister that moves sequentially up the coast, the Casco Bay guide fans out from Portland, assuming that most people will start in that general vicinity. It includes virtually every dent on every island, from the most miniscule cove to the largest harbors and marine facilities, gathered into small regions.

Overview maps and detail charts are provided, as well as icons for more than a dozen points of interest from launch ramps to fishing spots, pumpout stations to the usual eateries and showers. There is also extensive information on small boating in general, such as navigation, weather, and safety, as well as etiquette regarding private property. Those who enjoy learning about the history and traditions of their destinations will enjoy extensive discussions that belie the substantial research that must have gone into producing this volume.

Each major section is introduced, and individual destinations are numbered to reference the section maps. Individual locations are consistently formatted with an introduction followed by land and sea directions on how to get there and a description of things to do ashore. More than 100 small chart segments augment the text. There is so much information crammed into this easily carried paperback that the armchair sailor can enjoy Casco Bay as much as those who explore its environs, which range from Cape Elizabeth to Cape Small. Rindlaub plans eventually to publish seven volumes of the thin-water guides, mirroring the regions in the "Cruising Guide."


DIAMOND PASS PUBLISHING, INC.

19 Brook Lane, Peaks Island, Maine 04108 phone/fax 207-766-2337