Roaring Brook flows through and widens into extensive wetlands in several places. Beavers have created a pond just north of the road. Rising from the edge of the wetland complex is a mixed forest of hardwoods, spruce, fir and pine, including a beautiful stand of the fire-dependent jack pine. Surrounded by intense development, it remains a quiet haven for wildlife and the people who walk there.
Northern Corea Heath is a 600-acre property that links the National Wildlife Refuge to the south and Grand Marsh to the north. The wetlands and associated uplands here provide habitat for inland and coastal waterfowl and wading birds, migrating land birds, rare plants and unusual plant communities.
Visit Frenchman Bay Conservancy online for more information and a printable map or contact:
Frenchman Bay ConservancyFrom the Sullivan side of the Hancock-Sullivan Bridge drive 9.1 miles on US Route 1. Turn right onto ME Route 195 South to Prospect Harbor and Corea for 4.8 miles. At the junction with ME Route 186 in Prospect Harbor, turn left, drive 0.1 mile and turn right on ME Route 195/Corea Road. Drive on ME Route 195/Corea Road for 1.9 miles and look to the left for Frenchman Bay Conservancy’s blue diamond trail sign at the beginning of the trail.
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