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Sylvan Trail

The Sylvan trail is a mostly wooded loop with sections along fields, situated on privately owned land. The trail winds through mixed hardwood and softwood, old logging roads, and mowed farm fields.

Sylvan Trail

This property was once owned by Merritt Gay, a farmer who named the Sylvan Trail. The word “sylvan” is derived from the Latin word for woodland. Following the trail the first third of a mile runs parallel to the turnpike and the whining of tires on the speeding automobiles may interfere with the sounds of orioles, tanagers, other birds or voices in the area.

At approximately 0.3 miles, the trail turns right toward the southeast and then again left to the north east along a logging road. In another hundred feet, the trail reaches a fork where the outbound and return paths split. While the trail can be followed in either direction, it is described here assuming the user turns left along the logging road. The logging road is easy to follow but unmarked because the nearby pine trees have no exposed bark.

The user will continue through a mixture of deciduous and evergreen trees (characteristic of so much of Maine’s woodland) until reaching Mr. Gay’s field at about 0.9 miles. Looking east across the field, cars on US Route 1, the Gay farm, and the back of Aquaboggan recreational facility are clearly visible. The trail turns right, traveling southwest, to follow the edge of the field. Before the Sylvan Trail re-enters the woods at 1.2 miles, the observant hiker may discover some old apple trees which “resident deer” enjoy feeding on. Shortly after turn right onto another of several logging roads that crisscross the area, there is a giant old pine that was split by lightning and currently houses a family of porcupines. The height of the manure pile is an indicator of how long the porcupine family has occupied he tree.

Five to six hundred feet beyond the porcupine home, the trail takes a sharp right turn, and a switch back makes for easier going up a slight elevation gain. Shortly after the trail rejoins the trail leading back to the trailhead at Flag Pond Road.

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