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Visitors Fees
Canoe & Kayak Rentals Fishing • Hiking Swimming Pool Playground • Store
Big Rigs & Tenters Welcome
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20/30/50 Amp Service • Free WiFi
800 West Bethel Rd. • W. Bethel, ME 04286 207-836-2000
www.pleasantrivercampground.com
Most campgrounds will charge a fee when you have visitors at their properties. We ask that you consider the expense of operating a camping facility, including the cost of utilities, pools, restrooms, insurance, safety concerns and the overall added strain on the entire property when visitors are present. Most of the time pools, playgrounds and restrooms are available to visitors for only this modest visitor fee. So we hope you will understand that visitor fees are just the price of admission to the parks facilities. Thank you.
Four Seasons Camping Area • PO Box 927 • Naples, ME 04055 (207)693-6797 • Visit us on-line at: www.fourseasonscampingarea.com Route 302 Naples 04055 • Coordinates 43 59.374N, 70 38.947W Family Owned and Operated for Over 30 Years • Open Mid-May to Mid-October
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Western Lakes & Mountains
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• The Farm and House Museum
in Wilton houses a collection of shoemaking and farm tools, an extensive bottle collection, an exhibit featuring Sylvia Hardy, Maine’s Giantess and memorabilia of G.H. Bass, the originator of Bass Shoe.
• The Cascades in Rangeley is an impressive natural gorge and waterfall and nearby Small Falls has a stairway built along the Sandy River for exceptional views.
• Maine’s Paper & Heritage
Museum in Livermore Falls teaches the history of the paper industry along the Androscoggin River and its surrounding communities, offering educational programs and events to the public. We invite you in to learn how paper is made.
• The Nordica Homestead
Museum in Farmington is the 1857 homestead of 19th-century opera singer Lillian Nordica and features spectacular gowns, stage jewelry, opera scores and personal items.
Did you Know?
Old Fort Western in Augusta, built in 1754 is the oldest surviving wooden fort in the United States.
Benedict Arnold used the Fortsite as a staging point for his assault on Quebec during the American Revolution.
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• The Thorncrag Nature
Sanctuary Lewiston is a 372-acre preserve considered one of New England’s largest bird and smallanimal sanctuaries.
• The Shaker Museum in the Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village of New Gloucester is the last Shaker community in the country. Shaker furniture, inventions, early American tools, tin and woodenware, textiles and fancy goods are displayed.
• Oxford Casino - table games and slot machines.