Entire home
Historic waterfront cottage offers quiet, comfortable intimacy.
Photo gallery for Historic waterfront cottage offers quiet, comfortable intimacy.





1 bedroom1 bathroomSleeps 6
Popular amenities
Explore the area
Frenchboro, ME
- Place, Acadia National Park
- Place, Acadia National Park's Visitors Center
- Place, Bar Harbor Whale Watch Co
- Airport, Bar Harbor, ME (BHB-Hancock County - Bar Harbor)117 min drive
Rooms & beds
1 bedroom (sleeps 6)
Bedroom 1
1 Double Bed and 2 Single Beds
Living Room 1
1 Queen Sofa Bed
1 bathroom
Bathroom 1
Soap · Towels provided · Bathtub or shower · Toilet · Shampoo
About this property
Historic waterfront cottage offers quiet, comfortable intimacy.
Add dates for prices
Amenities
Pet-friendly
Free WiFi
Parking available
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House Rules
Check in after 10:00 AM
Minimum age to rent: 25
Check out before 2:00 PM
Children
Children allowed: ages 0–17
Events
No events allowed
Pets
Pets allowed: dogs less than 23 kg per pet (limit one pet total)
Smoking
Smoking is not permitted
Check-out instructions
The host requires you to complete the following before checking out:
Strip any used beds and gather used towels
Failure to complete these may result in a negative review from the host.
Important information
You need to know
Extra-person charges may apply and vary depending on property policy
Government-issued photo identification and a credit card, debit card or cash deposit may be required at check-in for incidental charges
Special requests are subject to availability upon check-in and may incur additional charges; special requests cannot be guaranteed
On-site parties or group events are strictly prohibited
Host has indicated that there is a carbon monoxide detector on the property
Host has indicated that there is no smoke detector on the property
About the area
Frenchboro
Frenchboro is home to this cottage. Bass Harbor Head Lighthouse and Stonington Opera House are local landmarks, and the area's natural beauty can be seen at Acadia National Park and Ship Harbor Nature Trailhead. Naturalist's Notebook and Stonington Sea Products are also worth visiting.
Frenchboro, ME
Getting around
Restaurants
- Island Bake Shoppe - 149 min drive
- Swans Island Fishermens Co-Op Pound - 162 min drive
- Tea Room - 160 min drive
- 31005 Feet Off the Coast of Maine
- Boathouse Gifts & Take Out - 161 min drive
Frequently asked questions
About the host
Hosted by Eric Best
Former journalist, author, still writing,
I came here first in early September 2018, by chance. I would later write this poem about that day:
Coming into the Island
I could not have known
Motoring into that small Maine dagger-shaped harbor
On the island where we had never been before
(To pick up a mooring just for the night)
That my feet would soon take me
Around the harbor road
A macadam necklace open at the throat
Past a log cabin for sale up the western slope
Whose mainland realtor would tell me over the phone
(I just called to inquire what they might want for it)
“If you want to buy a house on that island, keep walking”
So I followed the pot-holed road
Past the dagger’s point at the top of the harbor
And walked back past a paint-peeling church
With its weather-scarred steeple
Past a set of fishermen’s squat houses
Along that empty waterfront to a rise and open field
Occupied by a lone square Victorian two-story
Windows staring, also in decline
Before I came upon a white clapboarded Colonial
Off the road to my left
With a small partner cottage tucked under a twisted Hawthorne tree
all empty and for sale
with an 1824 pedigree sign affixed to one corner
and from whose main house platform deck across the back
facing the harbor looking west
I viewed the opposing hillside
Slashed across its base by that black harbor-front road
Rising in brown grass fields tinged with yellow
To a sharp evergreen forest across the ridge
Immensity of blue sky above
Just a few houses scattered across that field
White, pale yellow, chocolate brown
Spaced as if a painter had determined this composition
Perfect balance of space and object
Nature and what man hath made
Etched across that upland landscape
To become that landscape
And thought
"I could live in this painting"
So as someone who had just that instant
Fallen in love, and knew that he had
I determined to let go of my home in New York
And move my life to this island,
Where I realized my heart had been
all along.
-Eric Best
I came here first in early September 2018, by chance. I would later write this poem about that day:
Coming into the Island
I could not have known
Motoring into that small Maine dagger-shaped harbor
On the island where we had never been before
(To pick up a mooring just for the night)
That my feet would soon take me
Around the harbor road
A macadam necklace open at the throat
Past a log cabin for sale up the western slope
Whose mainland realtor would tell me over the phone
(I just called to inquire what they might want for it)
“If you want to buy a house on that island, keep walking”
So I followed the pot-holed road
Past the dagger’s point at the top of the harbor
And walked back past a paint-peeling church
With its weather-scarred steeple
Past a set of fishermen’s squat houses
Along that empty waterfront to a rise and open field
Occupied by a lone square Victorian two-story
Windows staring, also in decline
Before I came upon a white clapboarded Colonial
Off the road to my left
With a small partner cottage tucked under a twisted Hawthorne tree
all empty and for sale
with an 1824 pedigree sign affixed to one corner
and from whose main house platform deck across the back
facing the harbor looking west
I viewed the opposing hillside
Slashed across its base by that black harbor-front road
Rising in brown grass fields tinged with yellow
To a sharp evergreen forest across the ridge
Immensity of blue sky above
Just a few houses scattered across that field
White, pale yellow, chocolate brown
Spaced as if a painter had determined this composition
Perfect balance of space and object
Nature and what man hath made
Etched across that upland landscape
To become that landscape
And thought
"I could live in this painting"
So as someone who had just that instant
Fallen in love, and knew that he had
I determined to let go of my home in New York
And move my life to this island,
Where I realized my heart had been
all along.
-Eric Best
Why they chose this property
If you have had the experience of falling in love (I trust you have), with a person or a place or an object, you know that the act of falling in love calls upon you then to decide: what to do? I found myself looking at a colonial style house redolent of where I had grown up in a 1790 house in Massachusetts, Standing on the one road that circled the harbor, weathered homes randomly spaced, woods all around, a silence marked only by ocean movements into the harbor and a breezy northwest wind, the house having a its own beach on the harbor, and expansive pier, and a panoramic view of the opposite hillside, which as the day wears on becomes an infinite number of paintings, differentiated by the changing light that crosses the terrain as drops behind those western hills.
What makes this property unique
The main house and cottage are a kind of real estate antique (1824) for those who like the wood feel and staunch building style of those days, with smallish rooms suited to humans. The island's original settler/founder, Israel Lunt, very likely chose this spot for its shelter from the nor'easterly blasts that deliver the worst weather. This site enjoys a particular angle of sunlight through the day in all seasons, which rises from behind the eastern hill to illuminate the harbor and hillsides and descend below the western forest, imposing a wide range of color on all the vegetation throughout the day. I like to say that I live in a painting worthy of the Hudson Valley school. We are literally steps away from some of the most sublime coastal and pine forest Nature-walking, as we look out onto a small working waterfront and harbor that is always interesting. I am trying to cultivate flowers and vegetables worthy of these surroundings, so if there is a garden among you, I might ask your counsel.
Languages:
Finnish
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