Resorts In Maine

Are there counseling services for drug addiction that I can avail of in Augusta, Maine?
I have a co-worker that I want to help. I see her struggle everyday doing her duties at work and at home. I guess the pressure led her to Resort To drugs. I want to help her but I don’t where to start. Can you recommend me a counseling service?
There are so many counseling services available in Augusta. You can find the list in the link I have included below. You can choose the one nearest your place. You can also opt for the free 24-hour addiction helpline. Its number is also posted in one of the websites I have linked here.
The Samoset Resort, Rockport, Maine
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Bar Harbor $21.99 By 1898, when the production of picture postcards began, Bar Harbor had become one of America”s leading summer resorts and second only to Newport, Rhode Island, in wealth and social standing. For the next six decades, the postcard recorded the transformation of this coastal island community into a middle class tourist destination. Grand hotels, seaside mansions, and elegant gardens made way for roadside cabins and motels catering to automobile travelers. Bar Harbor features many never-before-published postcards from the collections of the Maine Historic Preservation Commission, the Bar Harbor Historical Society, and the Penobscot Marine Museum. |
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Glimpses of Maine’s Angling Past $21.99 Before airplanes, and with few roads, getting to Maine and the isolated fishing spots that made the state a world famous fisherman’s paradise was no small task. Huge resorts and hotels peppered the fishing regions, accommodating hundreds, perhaps thousands of sportsmen at any one time. From these lodgings, sports with their guides branched out, taking expeditions and canoe journeys that lasted for days, even weeks, into Maine’s wilderness. Only recently have vacationers been transient and as such, have changed the concepts of fishing in wilderness areas forever. Today, the hotels are mostly gone, and people now fish for a few hours to a day or more and then move on. Glimpses of Maine’s Angling Past returns to the days when vacationers settled into their camps for whole summers, before the endless acres of timber were dissected by logging roads, and secret, little-known lakes and ponds took days or weeks to reach. This long-anticipated volume includes countless images from the entire state, broken down into eight distinct areas: the Sebago Lakes, the Belgrade Lakes, the Rangeley Lakes, Down East, the Penobscot River Valley, the Kennebec River Valley, the Moosehead Lake Region, and northern Maine and the County. Included are rare photographs from lodges no longer in existence and antique sports magazines such as In the Maine Woods and Field and Stream. All of this is complemented by the author’s painstaking research and his intimate memories of Maine’s sporting history. |
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Here and There in New England and Canada. Illustrated $28.11 The book has no illustrations or index. It may have numerous typos or missing text. However, purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original rare book from the publisher”s website (GeneralBooksClub.com). You can also preview excerpts of the book there. Purchasers are also entitled to a free trial membership in the General Books Club where they can select from more than a million books without charge. Original Publisher: [Boston] Passenger department Boston andand Maine; Publication date: 1889; Subjects: Summer resorts; New England; Canada; White Mountains (N.H. and Me.); Travel / United States / Northeast / General; Travel / United States / Northeast / New England; |
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Maine Lodges And Sporting Camps $21.99 Beginning in the mid-1800s and lasting for more than a century, Maine boasted a large number of lodges and sporting camps that catered to the pursuit of outdoor activities. While the primary interests of guests were fishing and hunting, many of the larger, more expensive resorts offered a variety of opportunities, including golf, horseback riding, tennis, boating, archery, and hiking, and some boasted gourmet dining and elegant parties. While some of these establishments survive, many have been demolished, existing only in memory and in photographs. Maine Lodges and Sporting Camps tells the story of the most prominent destinations, featuring nearly two hundred historic images that depict the life that existed when Maine was a sportsman’s paradise, abounding in trophy game and fish. |
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Maine/New Hampshire/Vermont Slicker $105.97 This Maine / New Hampshire / Vermont Slicker features detailed inset maps and an index to places, points of interest in all three states, major highways and roads, airports, ski resorts, hiking trails and public recreation areas. |
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The Everything Guide to New England $1.21 An indispensable guide to the best of New England — in a convenient, travel-friendly formatNo matter what the season, the New England states are a perfect travel destination. Vacationers may enjoy stunning foliage in the fall, skiing in the winter, rich historical tours in the spring, or leisure time at seaside resorts in the summer.This exciting, idea-filled Everything RM guide — in a convenient new 6 x 9 format — covers all the New England states: Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine.The Everything RM Guide to New England features: — Clear maps of each state, including cities, towns, and recreational areas– Hotel accommodations for every budget– Restaurant guides– Major attractions and museums– Lighthouses– Family amusement parks– Historical points of interest– Bed and breakfasts– Hundreds of creative things to do for the whole family |
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The Moosehead Lake Region 1900-1950 $21.99 The Moosehead Lake region has long been a place where travelers go to escape. In the first half of the twentieth century, the region became a mecca for hunters and fishermen, as well as for travelers looking for rest and relaxation at popular resorts such as the Mount Kineo House. The Moosehead Lake Region: 1900-1950 uses vintage photographs to tell the story of this Maine retreat. The images depict visitors and residents of Greenville, Shirley, Rockwood, Beaver Cove, and Kokadjo; the lumbering era in the North Woods; and the locomotives whose whistles pierced the wilderness. |