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sassperillashana t1_itlnen0 wrote

My husband subbed me to r/trains as a joke a long time ago, but I'm still in it, and they would probably appreciate this post too!

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3baechu t1_itm365s wrote

I like the colorful containers

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daeedorian t1_itmhxln wrote

It’s a shame that they closed it off to the public— but in a way, it’s also wild that it wasn’t even posted until recently, and nobody seemed to mind visitors.

It seems like a lot of these strange but beautiful remote places in Maine get discovered and posted online, and then visitor numbers spike to an unprecedented level.

The eventual result is either that the attraction is made more formally public with signs and parking etc, which is great, but comes at the cost of mystique— or, sadly, they are made permanently inaccessible to the public, as was the case at Onawa.

I’ve come across a few remarkable and unknown places like that—Maine has many.

My approach is to be forthcoming about these places in person, ie, literal word-of-mouth—but I don’t post them to reddit or elsewhere online, because doing so can have really unfortunate and unintended effects.

Edit: Not at all a criticism of this lovely photo—the damage is already done at Onawa. Mostly just ruminating on the way things are changed by the internet.

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saigonk t1_itmrs0d wrote

I really need to get there with my drone next year.

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MeEvilBob t1_itmz2zc wrote

That's why you have to be really careful about what you post about places online.

Once enough people hear about a place someone proposes having a party there and boom, no trespassing signs and police patrols.

The Eagle Lake locomotives had no graffiti and even had some intact glass on the gauges until a few years ago when they became really popular online. Luckily they at least require enough deep woods hiking to keep them from becoming a popular family playground.

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MeEvilBob t1_itmzfwg wrote

When you see the blue ones that say Eimskip, that's the vast majority of the commercial products that are imported and exported between North America and Iceland. The containers come in on a shop to Portland where they're offloaded onto train cars which run south from there. Often when you stop for a train to pass south of Portland, half the train will be nothing but blue Eimskip containers.

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daeedorian t1_itn42cq wrote

Yeah, the locomotives are definitely one of the similar examples of backwoods Maine obscura that came to mind.

I do appreciate that the NMW and other concerned organizations responded to the huge uptick in interest in the locomotives by establishing a drivable dirt road with a nice trailhead and hiking path--but that increased accessibility does come with the liability you describe.

I get why people post stuff.

I think it's nice that folks find something really cool and want to share it. I know I have gotten that same impulse.

However, yes--in those moments, it's really important to remember that the internet doesn't need to know about everything, and you might inadvertently have a really negative impact on a place by publishing it online.

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