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"Nathaniel Hawthorne’s cave" on Raymond Cape (Sebago Lake 1/31/26). How extra superb to share such a far out ice adventure with my kids and so many awesome joyous people! Jamie and Matt and Jo and Chip and Courtneysnd keith and Evan so many more i didn’t see Saturday: So great to be alive…! “The story goes…” that old Nate used to canoe to this cave by Frye’s Leap when his family drove here in the Hawthorne’s Ford Country Squire… and work on his stories like The Scarlett Letter, and a winter manuscript called “The Shining”, never published… (who would ever believe a story like that coming out of Maine…?) I may also be a little skeptical about the old photos of petroglyphs on the rocks… EDITED Addendum: Getting to Frye's Leap Skating: by special request The path to Frye’s Leap some years comes from Jordan Bay, or Lower Bay, this year those are both snowed in but you can skate there from Big Bay. Just sight Frye Island and make for it from the north of the south, or straight acrost the lake. There was a 10-20 yd band of rubble ice across the entrance to the channel. I recommended taking off skates and walking across the rubble field, and Friday I also walked across the soft snow-ice that comes after the rubble (about 100-200 yds) till you get to much smoother hard ice by the Boulders. Then I watched some good skaters just plow right through the rubble field like it wasn’t even there! I told my kids to change into their boots (I brought their boots in my backpack) because they would need them for a surprise place: but they just skated right through the rubble field too, little stinkers!. Maybe the rubble-ice is getting a little smoother, and maybe i’m getting too soft, but I’ve seen a lot of people somehow get through on skates…! Sometimes they follow the shore and sneak in from the right or left, sometimes they go right over the middle of the glass shards/ I mean ice fragments Mandatory History background: I used to live right by Stephen King’s home in Bangor, and now I spend a lot of time on Sebago right by Nat Hawthorne's one-time home... Wikipedia says he lived in Raymond from 1816-1819, then he attended Bowdoin from 1821-1825 (the Hawthorne Community Assn. says he lived in Raymond from 1812-1825: who knows? but now you're stuck with even more History: (PS I don't like the way the old reference sources talk about the wabanaki people) Nathaniel Hawthorne was one of our greatest writers: born in 1804 in Salem, Mass, died in 1864 in Plymouth, NH. (He added the “W” to his last name when he graduated from Bowdoin, to break from some odious “Hathorne” relatives, including evil judges who ran the Salem Witch Trials.) Some sources say he moved to a home in Raymond, ME when he was 9, some say when he was 12. The house now bears the address 40 Hawthorne Road. This house happens to be less than ¼ mile from Sebago Lake. It is also only about 4.5 miles by canoe to Frye’s leap: “Frye’s Leap sits at the edge of the wooded Raymond’s Neck peninsula in Sebago Lake in a spot known as "the Gut" between Raymond Cape and Frye Island. It is sometimes known as the "Images."