Five walk-in tent sites, located in the Huckins Meadow. During summer and fall, 2021 tent sites are available on a first-come, first serve basis. No reservations.
***Walk-in camping rules:
-Please bring your own drinking water, there is no potable water at Huckins Beach.
-Maximum stay: three nights.
-No campfires permitted at any Cobscook Shores parklands.
-Visitors shall respect the quiet enjoyment of nature.
There are signs five miles away, but no indication where this place is when you get there. Location on maps seems to be a narrow dirt trail in reality.
There isn't enough history inclusion here about the Wabanaki Indian Nations. For thousands of years, this has been called home to the people of the dawnland. Great place. I just wish they allowed visitors in the winter also as I enjoy winter camping and this would make a great spot by the ocean.
Not just the settler colony, the settlers today call their state of Maine, this is ancestral homelands of the Wabanaki Indian nations. It thrills me to know out of staters bought these lands and don't have to pay the oppressive settler colony of Maine taxes, due to using the lands for recreation. Maine is the most oppressive settler colony towards it's neighbors of Indian country. Makes me happy they are not making money on Wabanaki Indian lands here.