Ocean Drive is the iconic route for those who wish to see the great geologic features of Acadia National Park. As much as I tend to eschew icons, I must admit that the Park Loop Road, as it is known, is certainly worth some of your time. As the visitor literature is quick to assert: If you have only one afternoon to spend in the park, spend it on the Park Loop Road. Just be sure to get out of your vehicle and explore.

Along the great outcroppings of granite that line the Atlantic near Monument Cove, there are views northward toward the expansive promontory of Great Head and the geological oddity of Sand Beach. Great blocks of granite and water-filled crevices and fissures in the rock attest to the power of the ocean to transform the land.

A focal length of 27mm, solidly within the realm of wide-angleland, gave me the expansive field-of-view I wanted and the opportunity to use the foreground watery depression as an introduction to the image. An aperture of f/22 provided depth-of-field; and a shutter speed of 1/5th second at ISO 100 gave me an overall medium exposure.

Acadia is the oldest national park east of the Mississippi. It was called Pemetic – The Sloping Land – by the Wabanaki People to whom it was home for thousands of years before the coming of the Europeans. It is the story of our public lands told as only our best stewardship can tell.