Hart Farm Trails (Holden, ME)

Information kiosk at trailhead, Hart Farm, Holden, ME

The trails at 157-acre Hart Farm in Holden, Maine, have been preserved by the Holden Land Trust and the Maine Farmland Trust, and are open from dawn to dusk. Dogs must be leashed (livestock is present) and cleaned up after. A trail map is available at the town of Holden website (and on kiosk at beginning). I have stopped by here several times on the way to/from Washington County/Dowmeast and Bangor, just a slight diversion off route 1A. This makes a great stop for people or a dog to stretch their legs. The outer loop hike around the Pocket Field Loop Trail is an easy 1.3 miles in about 30-40 minutes.

View of hills and mountains across cow pasture, Hart Farm, Holden, ME

The easy trail network, marked with blue diamonds, begins from a kiosk next to the small parking area, through tall grass and wildflowers, with cows lounging in the large field to the right. Here, the cleared land allows views of the hills to the northeast. It’s also an opportunity for a dumbfounded pit bull to see cows.

Pig the pit bull sees cows, Hart Farm Trails, Holden, ME

An option is available at this point to turn left (west) and connect through the Fields Pond Connector Trail with the Shelterwood Trail of the neighboring Fields Pond Audubon Nature Center trail network (dogs not allowed there). Continue straight to stay on the Hart Farm trails. Off the trail to the left are some junked vintage cars, as the trail curves around the border of the cow pasture.

Goldenrod Field, Hart Farm Trails, Holden, ME

I chose to go counterclockwise, taking me past a field of goldenrod and into the woods. The trail here has trickier footing, with rocks and roots, and was full of birdsong. The sounds weren’t completely wild, as I could hear dogs barking, power equipment, and the sound of jets heading to and from the Bangor airport. The Middle Trail bisects this loop.

Hart Farm Trails, Holden, ME

As I completed the circle, close to the Bates Homestead, the path hugged the edge of a gully with a small valley, typically containing a creek, but dry in some summer months, running through it. A large sign marked the historic Isaac Bates and Ursula Jones Homestead, now consisting of only sunken foundations, which was built prior to 1807. Not long after, I returned to the parking area.

Cows at Hart Farm Trails, Holden, ME

Fields Pond Audubon Center (Holden, ME)

Mowed Path, Fields Pond Audubon Center, Holden, ME

The Fields Pond Audubon center is a 229-acre sanctuary in Holden on the shores of Fields Pond. Trails are free and open to the public year round, dawn to dusk, and dogs are not allowed. In mid-August, I took a loop of the outside perimeter of Fields Pond by using the Mowed Path behind the Visitors Center, crossing the 300 foot bog bridge to the Lake Shore Trail, to the Beechwood Trail, then back on the Ravine Trail. This relatively easy loop of about 2 miles took about 47 minutes. I navigated using AllTrails, and trail maps are available on the website of the Fields Pond Audubon Center The trails are also well-marked and self-correcting, as prominent intersections are marked alphabetically.

Lake Shore Trail, Fields Pond Audubon Center, Holden, ME

I heard catbirds almost immediately, calling through the wide open fields covered with goldenrod, thistle, Queen Anne’s lace, and other wildflowers, attended by Monarch butterflies and many other insects. I continued left over the bog bridge to the Lake Shore Trail, stopping to let pass a sizable group of young day campers. The forest of the Lake Shore Trail quickly opened up to the shore of Fields Pond, where people were enjoying recreation opportunities like fishing and sailing. Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife lists Fields Pond as a popular place to catch pickerel and perch.

View of Fields Pond from Lake Shore Trail, Fields Pond Audubon Center, Holden, ME

At the letter “E” on the trail, I turned up and left to follow the blue blazes of the Beechwood Trail. The slope of this trail was slightly more challenging than the level grade of the Mowed Path and Lake Shore Trail, and wound uphill through a relatively open forest with many signs of recent trail work. Crows called throughout the piney trees, which gave way to the trail’s tree namesake, as well as numerous oak and birch. This deciduous forest quickly turned to marsh and swamp, and an American Goldfinch sang me through this portion, where there were ample deer tracks splashed through the mud.

Bright purple fungus, Beechwood Trail, Fields Pond Audubon Center, Holden, ME

The chattering of gray and red squirrels took over for the Goldfinch, and I picked my way through a host of ferns, and more swampy, low-lying areas, before I reached the intersection with the connector trail to Hart Farm Trails (conveniently marked with an “H”). I turned left to head back on the Ravine Trail toward the Nature Center. This portion of the trail was wide and covered with soft pine needles. At the intersection marked “G,” I turned left again to stay on the Ravine Trail as it worked its way downhill towards the Nature Center. At “C,” I turned right, and took rough stone steps down at the intersection of the Brook Trail to stay on the Ravine Trail, continuing the downward walk back to the parking area.

Stream running alongside Ravine Trail, Fields Pond Audubon Center, Holden, ME